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Erfurt

Erfurt (German pronunciation: [ˈɛʁfʊʁt] (listen))[3] is the capital and largest city in the Central German state of Thuringia. It is located in the wide valley of the Gera river (progression: GeraUnstrutSaaleElbeNorth Sea), in the southern part of the Thuringian Basin, north of the Thuringian Forest. It sits in the middle of an almost straight line of cities consisting of the six largest Thuringian cities forming the central metropolitan corridor of the state, the "Thuringian City Chain" (Thüringer Städtekette) with more than 500,000 inhabitants, stretching from Eisenach in the west, via Gotha, Erfurt, Weimar and Jena, to Gera in the east. Erfurt and the city of Göttingen in southern Lower Saxony are the two cities with more than 100,000 inhabitants closest to the geographic center of Germany. Erfurt is located 100 km (62 mi) south-west of Leipzig, 250 km (155 mi) north-east of Frankfurt, 300 km (186 mi) south-west of Berlin and 400 km (249 mi) north of Munich.

Erfurt
clockwise: view over the city, Merchants' Bridge (Krämerbrücke) from above, Merchants' Church (Kaufmannskirche), houses on Cathedral Square (Domplatz), Cathedral Hill (Domberg) with Erfurt Cathedral (Erfurter Dom) and St Severus' Church (Severikirche), Merchants' Bridge
Location of Erfurt within Thuringia
Erfurt
Erfurt
Coordinates: 50°59′N 11°2′E / 50.983°N 11.033°E / 50.983; 11.033Coordinates: 50°59′N 11°2′E / 50.983°N 11.033°E / 50.983; 11.033
CountryGermany
StateThuringia
DistrictUrban district
Founded1120
First mentioned742
Subdivisions53 districts
Government
 • Lord mayor (2018–24) Andreas Bausewein[1] (SPD)
 • Governing partiesSPD / Left / Greens
Area
 • Total269.17 km2 (103.93 sq mi)
Elevation
194 m (636 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total213,227
 • Density790/km2 (2,100/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
99084–99099
Dialling codes0361
Vehicle registrationEF
Websitewww.erfurt.de/ef/en/ (in English)

Erfurt's old town is one of the best preserved medieval city centres in Germany.[4] Tourist attractions include the Merchants' Bridge (Krämerbrücke), the Old Synagogue (Alte Synagoge), the oldest still standing synagogue in Europe, Cathedral Hill (Domberg) with the ensemble of Erfurt Cathedral (Erfurter Dom) and St Severus' Church (Severikirche) and Petersberg Citadel (Zitadelle Petersberg), one of the largest and best preserved town fortresses in Central Europe.[5] The city's economy is based on agriculture, horticulture and microelectronics. Its central location has made it a logistics hub for Germany and central Europe. Erfurt hosts the second-largest trade fair in eastern Germany (after Leipzig), as well as the public television children's channel KiKa.

The city is situated on the Via Regia, a medieval trade and pilgrims' road network. Modern day Erfurt is also a hub for ICE high speed trains and other German and European transport networks. Erfurt was first mentioned in 742, as Saint Boniface founded the diocese. Although the town did not belong to any of the Thuringian states politically, it quickly became the economic centre of the region and it was a member of the Hanseatic League.[6] It was part of the Electorate of Mainz during the Holy Roman Empire, and later became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1802. From 1949 until 1990 Erfurt was part of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany).

The University of Erfurt was founded in 1379,[7] making it the first university to be established within the geographic area which constitutes modern-day Germany. It closed in 1816 and was re-established in 1994, with the main modern campus on what was a teachers' training college. Martin Luther (1483–1546) was its most famous student, studying there from 1501 before entering St Augustine's Monastery in 1505.[8] Other noted Erfurters include the medieval philosopher and mystic Meister Eckhart (c. 1260–1328), the Baroque composer Johann Pachelbel (1653–1706) and the sociologist Max Weber (1864–1920).

History

Prehistory and antiquity

Erfurt is an old Germanic settlement. The earliest evidence of human settlement dates from the prehistoric era; archaeological finds from the north of Erfurt revealed human traces from the paleolithic period, ca. 10,000 BCE.[citation needed]

To the west of Erfurt in Frienstedt existed, in the AD era, a big Germanic village, which was found during the construction of a highway. Where they also discovered the oldest Germanic word ever discovered in Central Germany written in runic script was found on a comb from a sacrificial shaft the word: "kaba". From Roman Times, however, they found 200 coins dating back to the third century, plus 150 Roman ceramic fragments and more than 200 fibulae. Also 11 inhumation graves of the Haßleben-Leuna group, which is an archeological cultural group.

The Melchendorf dig in the southern city part showed a settlement from the neolithic period.[note 1] The Thuringii inhabited the Erfurt area in c. 480 and gave their name to Thuringia in c. 500.

Middle Ages

 
Erfurt, woodcut from the Nuremberg Chronicle, 1493
 
Old Synagogue, the oldest in Europe (1094)
 
Collegium maius building of the old University of Erfurt (1392)

The town is first mentioned in 742 under the name of "Erphesfurt": in that year, Saint Boniface wrote to Pope Zachary to inform him that he had established three dioceses in central Germany, one of them "in a place called Erphesfurt, which for a long time has been inhabited by pagan natives." All three dioceses (the other two were Würzburg and Büraburg) were confirmed by Zachary the next year, though in 755 Erfurt was brought into the diocese of Mainz.[13] That the place was populous already is borne out by archeological evidence, which includes 23 graves and six horse burials from the sixth and seventh centuries.[14]

Throughout the Middle Ages, Erfurt was an important trading town because of its location, near a ford across the Gera river. Together with the other five Thuringian woad towns of Gotha, Tennstedt, Arnstadt and Langensalza it was the centre of the German woad trade, which made those cities very wealthy. Erfurt was the junction of important trade routes: the Via Regia was one of the most used east–west roads between France and Russia (via Frankfurt, Erfurt, Leipzig and Wrocław) and another route in the north–south direction was the connection between the Baltic Sea ports (e. g. Lübeck) and the potent upper Italian city-states like Venice and Milan.

During the tenth and eleventh centuries both the Emperor and the Electorate of Mainz held some privileges in Erfurt. The German kings had an important monastery on Petersberg hill and the Archbishops of Mainz collected taxes from the people. Around 1100, some people became free citizens by paying the annual "Freizins" (liberation tax), which marks a first step in becoming an independent city. During the 12th century, as a sign of more and more independence, the citizens built a city wall around Erfurt (in the area of today's Juri-Gagarin-Ring). After 1200, independence was fulfilled and a city council was founded in 1217; the town hall was built in 1275. In the following decades, the council bought a city-owned territory around Erfurt which consisted at its height of nearly 100 villages and castles and even another small town (Sömmerda). Erfurt became an important regional power between the Landgraviate of Thuringia around, the Electorate of Mainz to the west and the Electorate of Saxony to the east. Between 1306 and 1481, Erfurt was allied with the two other major Thuringian cities (Mühlhausen and Nordhausen) in the Thuringian City Alliance and the three cities joined the Hanseatic League together in 1430. A peak in economic development was reached in the 15th century, when the city had a population of 20,000 making it one of the largest in Germany. Between 1432 and 1446, a second and higher city wall was established. In 1483, a first city fortress was built on Cyriaksburg hill in the southwestern part of the town.

In the year 1184, Erfurt was the location of a notable accident called the Erfurter Latrinensturz ('Erfurt latrine fall'). King Henry VI held council in a building of the Erfurt Cathedral to negotiate peace between two of his vassals, Archbishop Konrad I of Mainz and Landgrave Ludwig III of Thuringia. The amassed weight of all the gathered men proved too heavy for the floor to bear, which collapsed. According to contemporary accounts, dozens of people fell to their death into the latrine pit below. Ludwig III, Konrad I and Henry VI survived the affair.[15][16]

The Jewish community of Erfurt was founded in the 11th century and became, together with Mainz, Worms and Speyer, one of the most influential in Germany. Their Old Synagogue is still extant and a museum today, as is the mikveh at Gera river near Krämerbrücke.[17] In 1349, during the wave of Black Death Jewish persecutions across Europe, the Jews of Erfurt were rounded up, with more than 100 killed and the rest driven from the city. Before the persecution, a wealthy Jewish merchant buried his property in the basement of his house. In 1998, this treasure was found during construction works. The Erfurt Treasure with various gold and silver objects is shown in the exhibition in the synagogue today.[18] Only a few years after 1349, the Jews moved back to Erfurt and founded a second community, which was disbanded by the city council in 1458.

In 1379,[19] the University of Erfurt was founded. Together with the University of Cologne it was one of the first city-owned universities in Germany, while they were usually owned by the Landesherren. Some buildings of this old university are extant or restored in the "Latin Quarter" in the northern city centre (like Collegium Maius, student dorms "Georgenburse" and others, the hospital and the church of the university). The university quickly became a hotspot of German cultural life in Renaissance humanism with scholars like Ulrich von Hutten, Helius Eobanus Hessus and Justus Jonas.

Early modern period

 
Erfurt in 1650
 
Kurmainzische Statthalterei, seat of the governors of Erfurt (at front)
 
Christina, Queen of Sweden, depicted on a 1645 Erfurt 10 ducat coin. [note 2]

In 1501 Martin Luther (1483–1546) moved to Erfurt and began his studies at the university. After 1505, he lived at St. Augustine's Monastery as a friar. In 1507 he was ordained as a priest in Erfurt Cathedral. He moved permanently to Wittenberg in 1511. Erfurt was an early adopter of the Protestant Reformation, in 1521.[23]

In 1530, the city became one of the first in Europe to be officially bi-confessional with the Hammelburg Treaty. It kept that status through all the following centuries. The later 16th and the 17th century brought a slow economic decline of Erfurt. Trade shrank, the population was falling and the university lost its influence. The city's independence was endangered. In 1664, the city and surrounding area were brought under the dominion of the Electorate of Mainz and the city lost its independence. The Electorate built a huge fortress on Petersberg hill between 1665 and 1726 to control the city and instituted a governor to rule Erfurt.

In 1682 and 1683 Erfurt experienced the worst plague years in its history. In 1683 more than half of the population died because of the deadly disease.

In Erfurt witch-hunts are known from 1526 to 1705. Trial records are only incomplete. Twenty people were involved in witch trials and at least eight people died.

During the late 18th century, Erfurt saw another cultural peak. Governor Karl Theodor Anton Maria von Dalberg had close relations with Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Friedrich Schiller, Johann Gottfried Herder, Christoph Martin Wieland and Wilhelm von Humboldt, who often visited him at his court in Erfurt.

Erfurt during the Napoleonic Wars

 
Die Napoleonshöhe im Steiger bei Erfurt, painted by Nikolaus Dornheim [de] in 1812. Inaugurated in March 1811 to celebrate Napoleon's birthday, this Greek-style temple with grotto, flowerbeds and fountain in the Stiegerwald was burned in November 1813 and completely destroyed by Erfurters and their besiegers in 1814.

Erfurt became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1802, to compensate for territories Prussia lost to France on the Left Bank of the Rhine.[24][25] In the Capitulation of Erfurt, the city, its 12,000 Prussian and Saxon defenders under William VI, Prince of Orange-Nassau, 65 artillery pieces, and the Petersberg Citadel and Cyriaksburg Citadel Cyriaksburg, were handed over to the French on 16 October 1806.[26] At the time of the capitulation, Joachim Murat, Marshal of France, had about 16,000 troops near Erfurt.[27] With the attachment of the Saxe-Weimar territory of Blankenhain, the city became part of the First French Empire in 1806 as the Principality of Erfurt, directly subordinate to Napoleon as an "imperial state domain" (French: domaine réservé à l'empereur), separate from the Confederation of the Rhine, which the surrounding Thuringian states had joined.[28] Erfurt was administered by a civilian and military Senate[29] (Finanz- und Domänenkammer Erfurt)[28] under a French governor, based in the Kurmainzische Statthalterei, previously the seat of the city's governor under the Electorate.[29] Napoleon first visited the principality on 23 July 1807, inspecting the citadels and fortifications.[29] In 1808, the Congress of Erfurt was held with Napoleon and Alexander I of Russia visiting the city.[28]

During their administration, the French introduced street lighting and a tax on foreign horses to pay for maintaining the road surface.[28] The Peterskirche suffered under the French occupation, with its inventory being auctioned off to other local churches – including the organ, bells and even the tower of the Corpus Christi chapel (Fronleichnamskapelle) – and the former monastery's library being donated to the University of Erfurt (and then to the Boineburg Library when the university closed in 1816).[28] Similarly the Cyriaksburg Citadel was damaged by the French, with the city-side walls being partially dismantled in the hunt for imagined treasures from the convent, workers being paid from the sale of the building materials.[30]

In 1811, to commemorate the birth of the Prince Imperial, a 70-foot (21-metre) ceremonial column (Die Napoleonsäule) of wood and plaster was erected on the common.[28][31] Similarly, the Napoleonshöhe – a Greek-style temple topped by a winged victory with shield, sword and lance and containing a bust of Napoleon sculpted by Friedrich Döll[28][31][32] – was erected in the Stiegerwald woods, including a grotto with fountain and flower beds, using a large pond (lavoratorium) from the Peterskirche,[31] inaugurated with ceremony on 14 August 1811 after extravagant celebrations for Napoleon's birthday,[28] which were repeated in 1812 with a concert in the Predigerkirche conducted by Louis Spohr.[28]

With the Sixth Coalition forming after French defeat in Russia, on 24 February 1813 Napoleon ordered the Petersburg Citadel to prepare for siege, visiting the city on 25 April to inspect the fortifications, in particular both Citadels.[28] On 10 July 1813, Napoleon put Alexandre d'Alton [fr], baron of the Empire, in charge of the defences of Erfurt. However, when the French decreed that 1000 men would be conscripted into the Grande Armée, the recruits were joined by other citizens in rioting on 19 July that led to 20 arrests, of whom 2 were sentenced to death by French court-martial;[28] as a result, the French ordered the closure of all inns and alehouses.[33]

Within a week of the Sixth Coalition's decisive victory at Leipzig (16–19 October 1813), however, Erfurt was besieged by Prussian, Austrian and Russian troops under the command of Prussian Lt Gen von Kleist.[28][34] After a first capitulation signed by d'Alton on 20 December 1813 the French troops withdrew to the two fortresses of Petersberg and Cyriaksburg,[34] allowing for the Coalition forces to march into Erfurt on 6 January 1814 to jubilant greetings;[35][36] the Napoleonsäule ceremonial column was burned and destroyed as a symbol of the citizens' oppression under the French;[28][31][35][37] similarly the Napoleonshöhe was burned on 1 November 1813 and completely destroyed by Erfurters and their besiegers in 1814.[28][31] After a call for volunteers 3 days later, 300 Erfurters joined the Coalition armies in France.[35] Finally, in May 1814, the French capitulated fully, with 1,700 French troops vacating the Petersberg and Cyriaksburg fortresses.[35] During the two and a half months of siege, the mortality rate rose in the city greatly; 1,564 Erfurt citizens died in 1813, around a thousand more than the previous year.[36]

After the Congress of Vienna, Erfurt was restored to Prussia on 21 June 1815, becoming the capital of one of the three districts (Regierungsbezirke) of the new Province of Saxony, but some southern and eastern parts of Erfurter lands joined Blankenhain in being transferred to the Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach the following September.[35] Although enclosed by Thuringian territory in the west, south and east, the city remained part of the Prussian Province of Saxony until 1944.

Since 1815

 
Streetscape in the southern city extension (Gründerzeit style)
 
Housing projects in Bauhaus style from 1930
 
Hotel "Erfurter Hof", place of the first meeting of East and West German heads of government in 1970

After the 1848 Revolution, many Germans desired to have a united national state. An attempt in this direction was the failed Erfurt Union of German states in 1850.

The Industrial Revolution reached Erfurt in the 1840s, when the Thuringian Railway connecting Berlin and Frankfurt was built. During the following years, many factories in different sectors were founded. One of the biggest was the "Royal Gun Factory of Prussia" in 1862. After the Unification of Germany in 1871, Erfurt moved from the southern border of Prussia to the centre of Germany, so the fortifications of the city were no longer needed. The demolition of the city fortifications in 1873 led to a construction boom in Erfurt, because it was now possible to build in the area formerly occupied by the city walls and beyond. Many public and private buildings emerged and the infrastructure (such as a tramway, hospitals, and schools) improved rapidly. The number of inhabitants grew from 40,000 around 1870 to 130,000 in 1914 and the city expanded in all directions.

The "Erfurt Program" was adopted by the Social Democratic Party of Germany during its congress at Erfurt in 1891.

Between the wars, the city kept growing. Housing shortages were fought with building programmes and social infrastructure was broadened according to the welfare policy in the Weimar Republic. The Great Depression between 1929 and 1932 led to a disaster for Erfurt, nearly one out of three became unemployed. Conflicts between far-left and far-right-oriented milieus increased and many inhabitants supported the new Nazi government and Adolf Hitler. Others, especially some communist workers, put up resistance against the new administration. In 1938, the new synagogue was destroyed during the Kristallnacht. Jews lost their property and emigrated or were deported to Nazi concentration camps (together with many communists). In 1914, the company Topf and Sons began the manufacture of crematoria later becoming the market leader in this industry. Under the Nazis, JA Topf & Sons supplied specially developed crematoria, ovens and associated plants to the Auschwitz-Birkenau, Buchenwald and Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camps. On 27 January 2011 a memorial and museum dedicated to the Holocaust victims was opened at the former company premises in Erfurt.[38]

During World War II, Erfurt experienced more than 27 British and American air raids, about 1600 civilians died. Bombed as a target of the Oil Campaign of World War II, Erfurt suffered only limited damage and was captured on 12 April 1945, by the US 80th Infantry Division.[39] On 3 July, American troops left the city, which then became part of the Soviet Zone of Occupation and eventually of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany). In 1948, Erfurt became the capital of Thuringia, replacing Weimar. In 1952, the Länder in the GDR were dissolved in favour of centralization under the new socialist government. Erfurt then became the capital of a new "Bezirk" (district). In 1953, the Hochschule of education was founded, followed by the Hochschule of medicine in 1954, the first academic institutions in Erfurt since the closing of the university in 1816.

On 19 March 1970, the East and West German heads of government Willi Stoph and Willy Brandt met in Erfurt, the first such meeting since the division of Germany. During the 1970s and 1980s, as the economic situation in GDR worsened, many old buildings in city centre decayed, while the government fought against the housing shortage by building large Plattenbau settlements in the periphery. The Peaceful Revolution of 1989/1990 led to German reunification.

 
Socialist-era street signs removed from around the city of Erfurt after 1990

With the re-formation of the state of Thuringia in 1990, the city became the state capital. After reunification, a deep economic crisis occurred in Eastern Germany. Many factories closed and many people lost their jobs and moved to the former West Germany. At the same time, many buildings were redeveloped and the infrastructure improved massively. In 1994, the new university was opened, as was the Fachhochschule in 1991. Between 2005 and 2008, the economic situation improved as the unemployment rate decreased and new enterprises developed. In addition, the population began to increase once again.

A school shooting occurred on 26 April 2002 at the Gutenberg-Gymnasium.

Since the 1990s, organized crime has gained a foothold in Erfurt, with several mafia groups, including the Armenian mafia present in the city. Among other events, there has been a robbery and an arson attack targeting the gastronomy sector and in 2014 there was a shoot-out in an open street.

Geography and demographics

 
Gera river in the city centre

Topography

Erfurt is situated in the south of the Thuringian basin, a fertile agricultural area between the Harz mountains 80 km (50 mi) to the north and the Thuringian forest 30 km (19 mi) to the southwest. Whereas the northern parts of the city area are flat, the southern ones consist of hilly landscape up to 430 m of elevation. In this part lies the municipal forest of Steigerwald with beeches and oaks as main tree species. To the east and to the west are some non-forested hills so that the Gera river valley within the town forms a basin. North of the city are some gravel pits in operation, while others are abandoned, flooded and used as leisure areas.

Climate

Erfurt has a humid continental climate (Dfb) or an oceanic climate (Cfb) according to the Köppen climate classification system.[40][41] Summers are warm and sometimes humid with average high temperatures of 23 °C (73 °F) and lows of 12 °C (54 °F). Winters are relatively cold with average high temperatures of 2 °C (36 °F) and lows of −3 °C (27 °F). The city's topography creates a microclimate caused by the location inside a basin with sometimes inversion in winter (quite cold nights under −20 °C (−4 °F)) and inadequate air circulation in summer. Annual precipitation is only 502 millimeters (19.8 in) with moderate rainfall throughout the year. Light snowfall mainly occurs from December through February, but snow cover does not usually remain for long.

Climate data for Erfurt (1981–2010)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 2.3
(36.1)
3.3
(37.9)
8.0
(46.4)
13.1
(55.6)
17.7
(63.9)
20.4
(68.7)
23.2
(73.8)
23.1
(73.6)
18.4
(65.1)
13.1
(55.6)
6.9
(44.4)
2.9
(37.2)
12.7
(54.9)
Average low °C (°F) −3.1
(26.4)
−2.9
(26.8)
0.3
(32.5)
3.3
(37.9)
7.5
(45.5)
10.4
(50.7)
12.5
(54.5)
12.3
(54.1)
9.1
(48.4)
5.4
(41.7)
1.4
(34.5)
−2.0
(28.4)
4.5
(40.1)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 24.1
(0.95)
25.5
(1.00)
39.1
(1.54)
42.1
(1.66)
63.9
(2.52)
57.1
(2.25)
72.8
(2.87)
54.4
(2.14)
46.8
(1.84)
34.7
(1.37)
43.4
(1.71)
35.1
(1.38)
539
(21.23)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 60.9 79.2 118.3 173.0 211.0 209.2 223.4 208.6 153.4 117.2 60.5 44.6 1,659.3
Source: Météoclimat

Administrative divisions

 
Districts of Erfurt

Erfurt abuts the districts of Sömmerda (municipalities Witterda, Elxleben, Walschleben, Riethnordhausen, Nöda, Alperstedt, Großrudestedt, Udestedt, Kleinmölsen and Großmölsen) in the north, Weimarer Land (municipalities Niederzimmern, Nohra, Mönchenholzhausen and Klettbach) in the east, Ilm-Kreis (municipalities Kirchheim, Rockhausen and Amt Wachsenburg) in the south and Gotha (municipalities Nesse-Apfelstädt, Nottleben, Zimmernsupra and Bienstädt) in the west.

The city itself is divided into 53 districts. The centre is formed by the district Altstadt (old town) and the Gründerzeit districts Andreasvorstadt in the northwest, Johannesvorstadt in the northeast, Krämpfervorstadt in the east, Daberstedt in the southeast, Löbervorstadt in the southwest and Brühlervorstadt in the west. More former industrial districts are Ilversgehofen (incorporated in 1911), Hohenwinden and Sulzer Siedlung in the north. Another group of districts is marked by Plattenbau settlements, constructed during the DDR period: Berliner Platz, Moskauer Platz, Rieth, Roter Berg and Johannesplatz in the northern as well as Melchendorf, Wiesenhügel and Herrenberg in the southern city parts.

Finally, there are many villages with an average population of approximately 1,000 which were incorporated during the 20th century; however, they have mostly stayed rural to date:

  • Alach (incorporated 1994)
  • Azmannsdorf (1994)
  • Bindersleben (1950)
  • Bischleben-Stedten (1950)
  • Büßleben (1994)
  • Dittelstedt (1994)
  • Egstedt (1994)
  • Ermstedt (1994)
  • Frienstedt (1994)
  • Gispersleben (1950)
  • Gottstedt (1994)
  • Hochheim (1938)
  • Hochstedt (1994)
  • Kerspleben (1994)
  • Kühnhausen (1994)
  • Linderbach (1994)
  • Marbach (1950)
  • Mittelhausen (1994)
  • Möbisburg-Rhoda (1950)
  • Molsdorf (1994)
  • Niedernissa (1994)
  • Rohda (1994)
  • Salomonsborn (1994)
  • Schaderode (1994)
  • Schmira (1950)
  • Schwerborn (1994)
  • Stotternheim (1994)
  • Tiefthal (1994)
  • Töttelstädt (1994)
  • Töttleben (1994)
  • Urbich (1994)
  • Vieselbach (1994)
  • Wallichen (1994)
  • Waltersleben (1994)
  • Windischholzhausen (1994)

Demographics

 
History of the population from 1493 to 2014.
Historical population
YearPop.±%
149318,680—    
162019,000+1.7%
163213,000−31.6%
171014,338+10.3%
180216,938+18.1%
181714,846−12.4%
187143,616+193.8%
190085,202+95.3%
1910111,463+30.8%
1925136,555+22.5%
1933146,270+7.1%
1939165,615+13.2%
1951190,487+15.0%
1961186,369−2.2%
1971198,265+6.4%
1976205,483+3.6%
1981212,012+3.2%
1986217,134+2.4%
1991204,912−5.6%
1996208,179+1.6%
2001200,126−3.9%
2011206,384+3.1%
2016211,113+2.3%
2019213,981+1.4%
Population size may be affected by changes in administrative divisions.
The largest groups of foreign residents[42]
Nationality Population (31 December 2017)
Syria 2,415
Poland 2,025
Afghanistan 1,015
Russia 870
Romania 790

Around the year 1500, the city had 18,000 inhabitants and was one of the largest cities in the Holy Roman Empire. The population then more or less stagnated until the 19th century. The population of Erfurt was 21,000 in 1820, and increased to 32,000 in 1847, the year of rail connection as industrialization began. In the following decades Erfurt grew up to 130,000 at the beginning of World War I and 190,000 inhabitants in 1950. A maximum was reached in 1988 with 220,000 persons. The bad economic situation in eastern Germany after the reunification resulted in a decline in population, which fell to 200,000 in 2002 before rising again to 206,000 in 2011. The average growth of population between 2009 and 2012 was approximately 0.68% p. a, whereas the population in bordering rural regions is shrinking with accelerating tendency. Suburbanization played only a small role in Erfurt. It occurred after reunification for a short time in the 1990s, but most of the suburban areas were situated within the administrative city borders.

The birth deficit was 200 in 2012, this is −1.0 per 1,000 inhabitants (Thuringian average: -4.5; national average: -2.4). The net migration rate was +8.3 per 1,000 inhabitants in 2012 (Thuringian average: -0.8; national average: +4.6).[43] The most important regions of origin of Erfurt migrants are rural areas of Thuringia, Saxony-Anhalt and Saxony as well as foreign countries like Poland, Russia, Syria, Afghanistan and Hungary.

Like other eastern German cities, foreigners account only for a small share of Erfurt's population: circa 3.0% are non-Germans by citizenship and overall 5.9% are migrants (according to the 2011 EU census).

Due to the official atheism of the former GDR, most of the population is non-religious. 14.8% are members of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany and 6.8% are Catholics (according to the 2011 EU census). The Jewish Community consists of 500 members. Most of them migrated to Erfurt from Russia and Ukraine in the 1990s.

Culture, sights and cityscape

Residents notable in cultural history

The theologian, philosopher and mystic Meister Eckhart (c. 1260–1328) entered the Dominican monastery (Predigerkloster) in Erfurt when he was aged about 18 (around 1275). Eckhart was the Dominican prior at Erfurt from 1294 until 1298, and Vicar of Thuringia from 1298 to 1302. After a year in Paris, he returned to Erfurt in 1303 and administered his duties as Provincial of Saxony from there until 1311.[44]

Martin Luther (1483–1546) studied law and philosophy at the University of Erfurt from 1501. He lived in St Augustine's Monastery in Erfurt, as a friar from 1505 to 1511.[45]

Johann Pachelbel (1653–1706) served as organist at the Predigerkirche (Preachers Church) in Erfurt from June 1678 until August 1690. Pachelbel composed approximately seventy pieces for organ while in Erfurt.

The city is the birthplace of one of Johann Sebastian Bach's cousins, Johann Bernhard Bach, as well as Johann Sebastian Bach's father Johann Ambrosius Bach. Bach's parents were married in 1668 in the Kaufmannskirche (Merchant's Church) that still exists on the main square of Anger.

Alexander Müller (1808–1863), pianist, conductor and composer, was born in Erfurt. He later moved to Zürich where he served as leader of the General Music Society's subscription concerts series.

Max Weber (1864–1920) was born in Erfurt.[46] He was a sociologist, philosopher, lawyer, and political economist whose ideas have profoundly influenced modern social theory and social research.

After 1906 the composer Richard Wetz (1875–1935) lived in Erfurt and became the leading person in the city's musical life. His major works were written here, including three symphonies, a Requiem and a Christmas Oratorio.

The textile designer Margaretha Reichardt (1907–1984) was born and died in Erfurt. She studied at the Bauhaus from 1926 to 1930,[47] and while there worked with Marcel Breuer on his innovative chair designs. Her former home and weaving workshop in Erfurt, the Margaretha Reichardt Haus, is now a museum, managed by the Angermuseum Erfurt.

Famous contemporary musicians from Erfurt are Clueso, the Boogie Pimps and Yvonne Catterfeld.

Museums

Erfurt has a great variety of museums:

  • The Stadtmuseum (municipal museum) shows aspects of Erfurt's history with a focus on the Middle Ages, early modern history, Martin Luther and the university. Other parts of the Stadtmuseum are the Neue Mühle (new mill), an old water mill still in operation, and the Benaryspeicher (Benary's magazine) with an exhibition of old printing machines.
  • The Alte Synagoge (Old Synagogue) is one of the oldest synagogue buildings in Europe.[48] It is now a museum of local Jewish history. It houses facsimiles of medieval Hebrew manuscripts and the Erfurt Treasure, a hoard of coins and goldsmiths' work that is assumed to have belonged to Jews who hid them in 1349 at the time of the Black Death pogroms.
  • The Erinnerungsort Topf & Söhne (Topf and Sons memorial) is on the site of the factory of the company which constructed crematoria for Auschwitz and other concentration camps. Its exhibitions explore the collaboration of a civilian company with the National Socialist regime in the holocaust.
  • Memorial and Education Centre Andreasstrasse, (Stasi Museum). On the site of the former Erfurt Stasi prison, where over 5000 people were held. On 4 December 1989, the building was occupied by local residents. It was the first of many such takeovers of Stasi buildings in the former East Germany.[49] Today it has exhibitions on the history of East Germany and the activities of its regime.
  • The Angermuseum is one of the main art museums of Erfurt, named after Anger Square, where it is located. It focuses on modern graphic arts, medieval sculpture and early modern artisanal handicraft.
  • The Kunsthalle Erfurt (Erfurt City Art Gallery) has exhibitions of contemporary art, of local, national and international artists.
  • The Margaretha Reichardt Haus is the home and workshop of the textile designer and former Bauhaus student, Margaretha Reichardt (1907–1984).[50]
  • The Peterskirche (Saint Peter's church) houses an exhibition of concrete art, i.e. totally abstract art (not art made out of concrete).
  • The Deutsches Gartenbaumuseum (German Horticulture Museum) is housed at the Cyriaksburg Citadel.[51]
  • The Naturkundemuseum (Natural History Museum) is situated in a medieval woad warehouse and explores Thuringian flora and fauna, geology and ecology.
  • The Museum für Thüringer Volkskunde (Museum of Folk Art and Cultural Anthropology) looks at the ordinary life of people in Thuringia in the past and shows exhibits of peasant and artisan traditions.
  • The Elektromuseum (Museum of Electrical Engineering) shows the history of electric engines, which have featured prominently in Erfurt's economy.
  • Schloss Molsdorf [de] in the district of Molsdorf is a Baroque palace with an exhibition about the painter Otto Knöpfer [de].

Image gallery

Theatre

Since 2003, the modern opera house is home to Theater Erfurt and its Philharmonic Orchestra. The "grand stage" section has 800 seats and the "studio stage" can hold 200 spectators. In September 2005, the opera Waiting for the Barbarians by Philip Glass premiered in the opera house. The Erfurt Theatre has been a source of controversy. In 2005, a performance of Engelbert Humperdinck's opera Hänsel und Gretel stirred up the local press since the performance contained suggestions of pedophilia and incest. The opera was advertised in the programme with the addition "for adults only".

On 12 April 2008, a version of Verdi's opera Un ballo in maschera directed by Johann Kresnik opened at the Erfurt Theatre. The production stirred deep controversy by featuring nude performers in Mickey Mouse masks dancing on the ruins of the World Trade Center and a female singer with a painted on Hitler toothbrush moustache performing a straight arm Nazi salute, along with sinister portrayals of American soldiers, Uncle Sam, and Elvis Presley impersonators. The director described the production as a populist critique of modern American society, aimed at showing up the disparities between rich and poor. The controversy prompted one local politician to call for locals to boycott the performances, but this was largely ignored and the première was sold out.[52]

Sport

 
Gunda-Niemann-Stirnemann Halle

The Messe Erfurt serves as home court for the Oettinger Rockets, a professional basketball team in Germany's first division, the Basketball Bundesliga.

Notable types of sport in Erfurt are athletics, ice skating, cycling (with the oldest velodrome in use in the world, opened in 1885), swimming, handball, volleyball, tennis and football. The city's football club FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt is member of 3. Fußball-Liga and based in Steigerwaldstadion with a capacity of 20,000. The Gunda-Niemann-Stirnemann Halle was the second indoor speed skating arena in Germany.

Cityscape

 
Architecture from the Gründerzeit in Brühlervorstadt district

Erfurt's cityscape features a medieval core of narrow, curved alleys in the centre surrounded by a belt of Gründerzeit architecture, created between 1873 and 1914. In 1873, the city's fortifications were demolished and it became possible to build houses in the area in front of the former city walls. In the following years, Erfurt saw a construction boom. In the northern area (districts Andreasvorstadt, Johannesvorstadt and Ilversgehofen) tenements for the factory workers were built whilst the eastern area (Krämpfervorstadt and Daberstedt) featured apartments for white-collar workers and clerks and the southwestern part (Löbervorstadt and Brühlervorstadt) with its beautiful valley landscape saw the construction of villas and mansions of rich factory owners and notables.

During the interwar period, some settlements in Bauhaus style were realized, often as housing cooperatives.

After World War II and over the whole GDR period, housing shortages remained a problem even though the government started a big apartment construction programme. Between 1970 and 1990 large Plattenbau settlements with high-rise blocks on the northern (for 50,000 inhabitants) and southeastern (for 40,000 inhabitants) periphery were constructed. After reunification the renovation of old houses in city centre and the Gründerzeit areas was a big issue. The federal government granted substantial subsidies, so that many houses could be restored.

Compared to many other German cities, little of Erfurt was destroyed in World War II. This is one reason why the centre today offers a mixture of medieval, Baroque and Neoclassical architecture as well as buildings from the last 150 years.

Public green spaces are located along Gera river and in several parks like the Stadtpark, the Nordpark and the Südpark. The largest green area is the Egapark [de], a horticultural exhibition park and botanic garden established in 1961.

Sights and architectural heritage

Churches, monasteries and synagogues

 
St Mary's Cathedral (left) and St Severus' Church (right) on Domberg hill

The city centre has about 25 churches and monasteries, most of them in Gothic style, some also in Romanesque style or a mixture of Romanesque and Gothic elements, and a few in later styles. The various steeples characterize the medieval centre and led to one of Erfurt's nicknames as the "Thuringian Rome".[53]

Catholic churches and monasteries
  • The Allerheiligenkirche (All Saints' Church) is a 14th-century Gothic church in Marktstraße (Market Street), which hosts a columbarium.
  • The Dom St. Marien (St Mary's Cathedral) perches above Domplatz, the Cathedral Square. It is the episcopal see and one of the main sights of Erfurt. It combines Romanesque and Gothic elements and has the largest free-swinging medieval bell in the world,[54] which is named Gloriosa. One of the works of art inside the cathedral is Lucas Cranach the Elder's 'The Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine' painted around 1520.[55]
  • The Lorenzkirche (St Lawrence's Church) is a small 14th-century Gothic parish church at Anger Square.
  • The Martinikirche (St Martin's Church) was built in the 15th century in Gothic style and in 1755–58 converted to Baroque style. It was both a Cistercian nunnery and a parish church of Brühl, a medieval suburban zone.
  • The Neuwerkskirche St. Crucis ("church of the new facility", Holy Cross Church) is a 15th-century Gothic church at Neuwerkstraße, that was later converted to Baroque style. Until 1285, it was used by a convent of Augustinian nuns.
  • The Schottenkirche St. Nikolai und St. Jakobi (Scots Monks' Church of St Nicholas and St James) is an 11th-century Romanesque monastery church with a Baroque façade, which was later used as a parish church.
  • The Severikirche (St Severus' Church) is the second-largest parish church after the cathedral and stands next to it on the Domberg hill. It is in Gothic style and was built around 1300.
  • The Ursulinenkirche, St Ursula's Church, is a Gothic church at Anger Square. It is attached to the Ursulinenkloster, St Ursula's Nunnery, founded in 1136.[56] It is the only medieval monastery or nunnery in Erfurt which has been in continuous operation since it opened.
  • The Wigbertikirche (St Wigbert's Church) is a 15th-century Gothic church near Anger Square.
Protestant churches and monasteries
  • Ägidienkirche (St Giles' Church) is a 14th-century Gothic parish church at Wenigemarkt Square. It is the surviving one of formerly two bridge-head churches of the Krämerbrücke located on both ends of the bridge. As a result, the nave is on the first floor, while on ground level is a passage to the bridge. The steeple is open to the public and offers a good view over the city centre. Today, St Giles' Church is a Methodist parish church.
  • Andreaskirche (St Andrew's Church) is a 14th-century Gothic parish church at Andreasstraße (Andrew's Street). The old craftsmen's quarter around it is named Andreasviertel after the church.
  • Augustinerkloster (St Augustine's Monastery) dates from 1277. Martin Luther lived there as a monk between 1505 and 1511. The site has had a varied history and the restored complex has both modern and medieval buildings. Today it belongs to the Evangelical Church in Germany and as well as being a place of worship it is also a meeting and conference centre, and provides simple guest accommodation. In 2016, an application was made for it to be included in the already existing UNESCO World Heritage Site "Luther sites in Central Germany".[57]
  • The Kaufmannskirche St. Gregor (Merchant's Church of St Gregory) is a 14th-century Gothic parish church at Anger square. It is one of the largest and most important original parish churches in Erfurt. The parents of Johann Sebastian Bach, Johann Ambrosius Bach and Maria Elisabeth Lämmerhirt, married here in 1668.
  • Michaeliskirche (St Michael's Church) is a 13th-century Gothic parish church at Michaelisstraße. It became the church of the university in 1392. Erfurt's first Protestant sermon was preached here in 1521.[58] The church tower contains Erfurt's oldest bell "Katharina",[58] dating from 1380.
  • The Predigerkirche (Dominican Church) is a Gothic monastery church of the Dominicans at Predigerstraße. Since the Reformation in the 16th century, it is the main Protestant church of Erfurt and furthermore one of the largest former churches of the mendicant orders in Germany. The theologian and mystic Meister Eckhart (c. 1260–1328) entered Prediger Monastery around 1275. He was Prior from 1294 until 1298, and Vicar of Thuringia from 1298 to 1302. After a year in Paris, he returned to the monastery in 1303 and administered his duties as Provincial of Saxony from there until 1311.[59] The baroque composer Johann Pachelbel (1653–1706) was organist at the church from 1678 until 1690.
  • The Reglerkirche St. Augustinus (Regulated St Augustine's Church) is a 12th-century Romanesque-Gothic monastery church of the Augustinians at Bahnhofstraße (Station Street). After the Reformation, it became a Protestant parish church.
Former churches
  • The Barfüßerkirche is a 14th-century Gothic mendicant church at Barfüßerstraße. The former Franciscan monastery became a Protestant parish church after the Reformation. In 1944, the church was severely damaged by Allied bombing. Its high choir was restored, but the nave's ruins have been preserved as a war memorial.
  • The Bartholomäuskirche (St Bartholomew's Church) was a Gothic parish church at Anger Square. The church was demolished in 1715 and only the steeple remained. Today, the tower hosts a carillon with 60 bells.
  • The Georgskirche (St George's Church) was a parish church in Michaelisstraße. It was demolished in 1632 and only the church tower now remains.
  • The Hospitalkirche (Hospital Church) was the church of the former Great City Hospital at Juri-Gagarin-Ring. It is a 14th-century Gothic building and is used today as a depot by the Museum für Thüringer Volkskunde (Museum of Thuringian Ethnology).[60]
  • The Johanneskirche (St John's Church) was a parish church at John's Street. It was demolished in 1819, but the steeple remained.
  • The Kartäuserkirche St. Salvatorberg (Carthusian Church, Mount St Saviour) was a monastery church at Kartäuser-straße. The Baroque church was closed in 1803 and afterwards used for many different purposes. Today, it is part of a housing complex.
  • The Nikolaikirche (St Nicholas' Church) was a parish church in Augustine's Street. It was demolished in 1747 and only the steeple remained.
  • The Paulskirche (St Paul's Church) was a parish church in Paul's Street. It was demolished before 1759. The steeple remains and is in use as the belfry of the Prediger Church.
  • The Peterskirche (St Peter's Church) was built in the 12th century in Romanesque style as a church of the Benedictine monastery of St Peter and Paul on Petersberg hill, now the site of Petersberg Citadel. It was secularised in 1803 and used as a military store house. Today it houses an art gallery.
Synagogues

The oldest parts of Erfurt's Alte Synagoge (Old Synagogue) date to the 11th century. It was used until 1349 when the Jewish community was destroyed in a pogrom known as the Erfurt Massacre. The building had many other uses since then. It was conserved in the 1990s and in 2009 it became a museum of Jewish history.[48] A rare Mikveh, a ritual bath, dating from c.1250, was discovered by archeologists in 2007.[17] It has been accessible to visitors on guided tours since September 2011.[61] In 2015 the Old Synagogue and Mikveh were nominated as a World Heritage Site. It has been tentatively listed but a final decision has not yet been made.[62]

As religious freedom was granted in the 19th century, some Jews returned to Erfurt. They built their synagogue on the banks of the Gera river and used it from 1840 until 1884. The neoclassical building is known as the Kleine Synagoge (Small Synagogue). Today it is used an events centre. It is also open to visitors.[63]

A larger synagogue, the Große Synagoge (Great Synagogue), was opened in 1884 because the community had become larger and wealthier. This moorish style building was destroyed during nationwide Nazi riots, known as Kristallnacht on 9–10 November 1938.[64]

In 1947 the land which the Great Synagogue had occupied was returned to the Jewish community and they built their current place of worship, the Neue Synagoge (New Synagogue) which opened in 1952. It was the only synagogue building erected under communist rule in East Germany.[65]

Secular architecture

Besides the religious buildings there is a lot of historic secular architecture in Erfurt, mostly concentrated in the city centre, but some 19th- and 20th-century buildings are located on the outskirts.

 
The Michaelisstraße is known as the lithic chronicle of Erfurt.
Street and square ensembles
  • The Krämerbrücke (Merchants' bridge) is the most famous tourist attraction of Erfurt. This 15th-century bridge is completely covered with dwellings and unique in Europe north of the Alps. Today, there are some art handicraft and souvenir shops in the houses.
  • The Domplatz (Cathedral Square) is the largest square in Erfurt and one of the largest historical market squares in Germany. The cathedral and St Severus' Church on its western side can be reached over the Domstufen, a wide flight of stairs. On the north side lies the courthouse, a historic building from 1880. The eastern and southern side is fronted by early-modern patrician houses. On the square are the Minerva Fountain from 1784 and the Erthal Obelisk from 1777. The Domplatz is the main setting of the Erfurt Christmas Market in December and the location for "DomStufen-Festival", an open-air theatre festival in summer.
  • The Fischmarkt (Fish Market) is the central square of Erfurt's city centre. It is surrounded by renaissance-style patrician houses and the town hall, a neo-gothic building from 1882. In the middle of the square is a statue called Römer (Roman), a symbol of the city's independence, erected by the citizens in 1591.
  • The Wenigemarkt (Minor Market) is a small square on the east side of the Gera river (opposite to the Fischmarkt on the west side), surrounded by early-modern patrician and merchants' houses. The fountain on this square with the sculpture "Scuffling Boys" was created in 1975. Today, Wenigemarkt square also has various cafés and bars. Next to the Wenigemarkt in Futterstraße is the Kaisersaal building, a neoclassicistic event hall from 1831 (current building). The Congress of Erfurt took place here in 1808.
  • The Anger (originally the German term for "village green") is a protracted square[clarification needed] in the eastern city centre. All tram lines are linked here, so that it became the new city centre during the 20th century with many important buildings. On its northern side is the main post office, built in 1886 in neo-gothic style with its prominent clock tower. In the north-east there is the Martin Luther monument from 1889 in front of the Merchants' Church. Between the church and the Ursuline monastery lies the "Anger 1" department store from 1908. On the south side next to Station Street is the Angermuseum, the art history museum of Erfurt, inside a Baroque palace from 1711. The western part of Anger square is surrounded by large historicist business houses from the late 19th century. The west end of the square is marked by the Angerbrunnen fountain from 1890. The Jesuit College near Schlösserstraße was built in 1737 and used until the ban of the Jesuits in 1773.
  • The Willy Brandt Square is the southern gate to the city centre in front of the main station. Opposite to the station is the former hotel Erfurter Hof, where the first meeting of the East- and West-German heads of government took place in 1970. On the western side is the building of the old Erfurt station (1847–95) with a clock tower and the former offices of the Thuringian Railway Company.
  • The Hirschgarten (Deer Garden) is a small park in front of the Thuringian government seat in the western city centre. The minister-president's seat is the Kurmainzische Statthalterei, a Renaissance-Baroque palace from the 17th century.
  • The Michaelisstraße (Michael's Street) is known as "the lithic chronicle of Erfurt", because of its mostly medieval buildings. It is the main street of the Latin quarter around the old university and today one of the favourite nightlife districts of the Erfurters with various bars, restaurants and cafés. The central building of the old university, Collegium Maius, was built in 1515, destroyed by Allied bombs in 1945 and originally rebuilt in 1999.
  • The Juri-Gagarin-Ring is an inner-city circular road following the former inner city wall. The road was set out in the 1890s by closing a branch of the Gera river. The buildings along the street originate from all periods of the 20th century, including some GDR-era highrise residence buildings. An old building complex here is the former Great Hospital, established in the 14th century. Today, it hosts the museum of popular art and cultural anthropology.
  • The Andreasviertel (St Andrew's Quarter) is a small quarter in the northern part of the city centre between Domplatz in the south-west and Moritzwallstraße in the north-east. It was the former craftsmen quarter with narrow alleys and old (16th/17th century) little houses. During the 20th century, there were plans to demolish the quarter because of its bad housing conditions. After 1990, the houses were redeveloped by private individuals so that it is one of the favourite neighbourhoods today. The largest building here is the former Municipal Corn Storage in Gothic style from 1466 with a floor area of 1,800 m2 (19,375 sq ft).
Fortifications

From 1066 until 1873 the old town of Erfurt was encircled by a fortified wall. About 1168 this was extended to run around the western side of Petersberg hill, enclosing it within the city boundaries.[66]

After German Unification in 1871, Erfurt became part of the newly created German Empire. The threat to the city from its Saxon neighbours and from Bavaria was no longer present, so it was decided to dismantle the city walls. Only a few remnants remain today. A piece of inner wall can be found in a small park at the corner Juri-Gagarin-Ring and Johannesstraße and another piece at the flood ditch (Flutgraben) near Franckestraße. There is also a small restored part of the wall in the Brühler Garten, behind the Catholic orphanage. Only one of the wall's fortified towers was left standing, on Boyneburgufer, but this was destroyed in an air raid in 1944.[66]

The Petersberg Citadel is one of the largest and best preserved city fortresses in Europe, covering an area of 36 hectares in the north-west of the city centre. It was built from 1665 on Petersberg hill and was in military use until 1963. Since 1990, it has been significantly restored and is now open to the public as an historic site.[67]

The Cyriaksburg Citadel [de] is a smaller citadel south-west of the city centre, dating from 1480. Today, it houses the German horticulture museum.[68]

19th- and 20th-century architecture in the outskirts

Between 1873 and 1914, a belt of Gründerzeit architecture emerged around the city centre. The mansion district in the south-west around Cyriakstraße, Richard-Breslau-Straße and Hochheimer Straße hosts some interesting Gründerzeit and Art Nouveau buildings.

The "Mühlenviertel" ("mill quarter"), is an area of beautiful Art Nouveau apartment buildings, cobblestone streets and street trees just to the north of the old city, in the vicinity of Nord Park, bordered by the Gera river on its east side. The Schmale Gera stream runs through the area. In the Middle Ages numerous small enterprises using the power of water mills occupied the area, hence the name "Mühlenviertel", with street names such as Waidmühlenweg (woad, or indigo, mill way), Storchmühlenweg (stork mill way) and Papiermühlenweg (paper mill way).

The Bauhaus style is represented by some housing cooperative projects in the east around Flensburger Straße and Dortmunder Straße and in the north around Neuendorfstraße. Lutherkirke Church in Magdeburger Allee (1927), is an Art Deco building.

The former malt factory "Wolff" at Theo-Neubauer-Straße in the east of Erfurt is a large industrial complex built between 1880 and 1939, and in use until 2000. A new use has not been found yet, but the area is sometimes used as a location in movie productions because of its atmosphere.

Examples of Nazi architecture include the buildings of the Landtag (Thuringian parliament) and Thüringenhalle (an event hall) in the south at Arnstädter Straße. While the Landtag building (1930s) represents more the neo-Roman/fascist style, Thüringenhalle (1940s) is marked by some neo-Germanic Heimatschutz style elements.

The Stalinist early-GDR style is manifested in the main building of the university at Nordhäuser Straße (1953) and the later more international modern GDR style is represented by the horticultural exhibition centre "Egapark" at Gothaer Straße, the Plattenbau housing complexes like Rieth or Johannesplatz and the redevelopment of Löbertor and Krämpfertor area along Juri-Gagarin-Ring in the city centre.

The current international glass and steel architecture is dominant among most larger new buildings like the Federal Labour Court of Germany (1999), the new opera house (2003), the new main station (2007), the university library, the Erfurt Messe (convention centre) and the Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann ice rink.

Economy and infrastructure

During recent years, the economic situation of the city improved: the unemployment rate declined from 21% in 2005 to 9% in 2013. Nevertheless, some 14,000 households with 24,500 persons (12% of population) are dependent upon state social benefits (Hartz IV).

Agriculture, industry and services

 
Former factory building, now reused for services
 
Anger 1, a big department store in centre

Farming has a great tradition in Erfurt: the cultivation of woad made the city rich during the Middle Ages. Today, horticulture and the production of flower seeds is still an important business in Erfurt. There is also growing of fruits (like apples, strawberries and sweet cherries), vegetables (e.g. cauliflowers, potatoes, cabbage and sugar beets) and grain on more than 60% of the municipal territory.

Industrialization in Erfurt started around 1850. Until World War I, many factories were founded in different sectors like engine building, shoes, guns, malt and later electro-technics, so that there was no industrial monoculture in the city. After 1945, the companies were nationalized by the GDR government, which led to the decline of some of them. After reunification, nearly all factories were closed, either because they failed to successfully adopt to a free market economy or because the German government sold them to west German businessmen who closed them to avoid competition to their own enterprises.[citation needed] However, in the early 1990s the federal government started to subsidize the foundation of new companies. It still took a long time before the economic situation stabilized around 2006. Since this time, unemployment has decreased and overall, new jobs were created. Today, there are many small and medium-sized companies in Erfurt with electro-technics, semiconductors and photovoltaics in focus. Engine production, food production, the Braugold brewery, and Born Feinkost, a producer of Thuringian mustard, remain important industries.

Erfurt is an Oberzentrum (which means "supra-centre" according to Central place theory) in German regional planning. Such centres are always hubs of service businesses and public services like hospitals, universities, research, trade fairs, retail etc. Additionally, Erfurt is the capital of the federal state of Thuringia, so that there are many institutions of administration like all the Thuringian state ministries and some nationwide authorities. Typical for Erfurt are the logistic business with many distribution centres of big companies, the Erfurt Trade Fair and the media sector with KiKa and MDR as public broadcast stations. A growing industry is tourism, due to the various historical sights of Erfurt. There are 4,800 hotel beds and (in 2012) 450,000 overnight visitors spent a total of 700,000 nights in hotels. Nevertheless, most tourists are one-day visitors from Germany. The Christmas Market in December attracts some 2,000,000 visitors each year.

Transport

 
Erfurt Hauptbahnhof, Erfurt's main railway station.

By rail

The ICE railway network puts Erfurt 112 hours from Berlin, 212 hours from Frankfurt, 2 hours from Dresden, and 45 minutes from Leipzig. In 2017, the ICE line to Munich opened, making the trip to Erfurt main station only 212 hours.[69]

There are regional trains from Erfurt to Weimar, Jena, Gotha, Eisenach, Bad Langensalza, Magdeburg, Nordhausen, Göttingen, Mühlhausen, Würzburg, Meiningen, Ilmenau, Arnstadt, and Gera.

In freight transport there is an intermodal terminal in the district of Vieselbach (Güterverkehrszentrum, GVZ) with connections to rail and the autobahn.

By road

The two Autobahnen crossing each other nearby at Erfurter Kreuz are the Bundesautobahn 4 (FrankfurtDresden) and the Bundesautobahn 71 (SchweinfurtSangerhausen). Together with the east tangent both motorways form a circle road around the city and lead the interregional traffic around the centre. Whereas the A 4 was built in the 1930s, the A 71 came into being after the reunification in the 1990s and 2000s. In addition to both motorways there are two Bundesstraßen: the Bundesstraße 7 connects Erfurt parallel to A 4 with Gotha in the west and Weimar in the east. The Bundesstraße 4 is a connection between Erfurt and Nordhausen in the north. Its southern part to Coburg was annulled when A 71 was finished (in this section, the A 71 now effectively serves as B 4). Within the circle road, B 7 and B 4 are also annulled, so that the city government has to pay for maintenance instead of the German federal government. The access to the city is restricted as Umweltzone since 2012 for some vehicles. Large parts of the inner city are a pedestrian area which can not be reached by car (except for residents).

By light rail and bus

 
Light rail tram near Anger square

The Erfurt public transport system is marked by the area-wide Erfurt Stadtbahn (light rail) network, established as a tram system in 1883, upgraded to a light rail (Stadtbahn) system in 1997,[70] and continually expanded and upgraded through the 2000s. Today, there are six Stadtbahn lines running every ten minutes on every light rail route.

Additionally, Erfurt operates a bus system, which connects the sparsely populated outer districts of the region to the city center. Both systems are organized by SWE EVAG, a transit company owned by the city administration. Trolleybuses were in service in Erfurt from 1948 until 1975, but are no longer in service.

By airplane

Erfurt-Weimar Airport lies 3 km (2 mi) west of the city centre. It is linked to the central train station via Stadtbahn (tram). It was significantly extended in the 1990s, with flights mostly to Mediterranean holiday destinations and to London during the peak Christmas market tourist season. Connections to longer haul flights are easily accessible via Frankfurt Airport, which can be reached in 2 hours via a direct train from Frankfurt Airport to Erfurt, and from Leipzig/Halle Airport, which can be reached within half an hour.

By bike

Biking is becoming increasingly popular since construction of high quality cycle tracks began in the 1990s. There are cycle lanes for general commuting within Erfurt city.

Long-distance trails, such as the Gera track and the Radweg Thüringer Städtekette (Thuringian cities trail), connect points of tourist interest. The former runs along the Gera river valley from the Thuringian forest to the river Unstrut; the latter follows the medieval Via Regia from Eisenach to Altenburg via Gotha, Erfurt, Weimar, and Jena.

The Rennsteig Cycle Way was opened in 2000. This designated high-grade hiking and bike trail runs along the ridge of the Thuringian Central Uplands. The bike trail, about 200 km (124 mi) long, occasionally departs from the course of the historic Rennsteig hiking trail, which dates back to the 1300s, to avoid steep inclines. It is therefore about 30 km (19 mi) longer than the hiking trail.

The Rennsteig is connected to the E3 European long distance path, which goes from the Atlantic coast of Spain to the Black Sea coast of Bulgaria, and the E6 European long distance path, running from Arctic Finland to Turkey.

Education

After reunification, the educational system was reorganized. The University of Erfurt, founded in 1379[19] and closed in 1816, was refounded in 1994 with a focus on social sciences, modern languages, humanities and teacher training. Today there are approximately 6,000 students working within four faculties, the Max Weber Center for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies, and three academic research institutes.[71] The university has an international reputation and participates in international student exchange programmes.[72]

The Fachhochschule Erfurt, is a university of applied sciences, founded in 1991, which offers a combination of academic training and practical experience in subjects such as social work and social pedagogy, business studies, and engineering. There are nearly 5,000 students in six faculties, of which the faculty of landscaping and horticulture has a national reputation.

The International University of Applied Sciences Bad Honnef – Bonn (IUBH), is a privately run university with a focus on business and economics. It merged with the former Adam-Ries-Fachhochschule in 2013.

The world renowned Bauhaus design school was founded in 1919 in the city of Weimar,[73] approximately 20 km (12 mi) from Erfurt, 12 minutes by train. The buildings are now part of a World Heritage Site and are today used by the Bauhaus-Universität Weimar, which teaches design, arts, media and technology related subjects.

Furthermore, there are eight Gymnasien, six state-owned, one Catholic and one Protestant (Evangelisches Ratsgymnasium Erfurt). One of the state-owned schools is a Sportgymnasium, an elite boarding school for young talents in athletics, swimming, ice skating or football. Another state-owned school, Albert Schweitzer Gymnasium, offers a focus in sciences as an elite boarding school in addition to the common curriculum.

Media

The German national public television children's channel KiKa is based in Erfurt.

MDR, Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk, a radio and television company, has a broadcast centre and studios in Erfurt.

The Thüringer Allgemeine is a statewide newspaper that is headquartered in the city.[74]

Politics

Mayor and city council

 
Results of the second round of the 2018 mayoral election.

The first freely elected mayor after German reunification was Manfred Ruge of the Christian Democratic Union, who served from 1990 to 2006. Since 2006, Andreas Bausewein of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) has been mayor. The most recent mayoral election was held on 15 April 2018, with a runoff held on 29 April, and the results were as follows:

Candidate Party First round Second round
Votes % Votes %
Andreas Bausewein Social Democratic Party 25,450 30.4 35,432 58.5
Marion Walsmann Christian Democratic Union 18,348 21.9 25,118 41.5
Stefan Möller Alternative for Germany 12,077 14.4
Karola Stange The Left 9,312 11.1
Sebastian Perdelwitz Better City Erfurt 7,963 9.5
Alexander Thumfart Alliance 90/The Greens 5,323 6.4
Daniel Stassny Free Voters / Pirate Party 3,519 4.2
Marko Enke Free Democratic Party 1,709 2.0
Valid votes 83,701 99.3 60,550 98.0
Invalid votes 562 0.7 1,240 2.0
Total 84,263 100.0 61,790 100.0
Electorate/voter turnout 172,908 48.7 172,562 35.8
Source: Wahlen in Thüringen
 
Results of the 2019 city council election.

The most recent city council election was held on 26 May 2019, and the results were as follows:

Party Lead candidate Votes % +/- Seats +/-
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) Michael Panse 56,789 19.6   5.1 10   2
Social Democratic Party (SPD) Andreas Bausewein 49,627 17.1   11.6 9   6
The Left (Die Linke) Matthias Bärwolff 47,742 16.5   5.5 8   3
Alternative for Germany (AfD) Stefan Möller 43,069 14.9   10.4 7   5
Alliance 90/The Greens (Grüne) Astrid Rothe-Beinlich 34,318 11.8   2.1 6   1
Better City Erfurt (M) Tina Morgenroth 21,303 7.3 New 4 New
Free Democratic Party (FDP) Thomas Kemmerich 15,513 5.4   2.9 3   2
Free Voters (FW) Daniel Stassny 14,454 5.0   1.6 2 ±0
Pirate Party Germany (Piraten) Peter Städter 5,472 1.9   0.2 1 ±0
The III. Path Enrico Biczysko 1,635 0.6 New 0 New
Valid votes 97,492 96.8
Invalid votes 3,232 3.2
Total 100,724 100.0 50 ±0
Electorate/voter turnout 172,389 58.4   11.1
Source: Wahlen in Thüringen

Twin towns – sister cities

Erfurt is twinned with:[75]

Notable people

Footnotes

  1. ^ As with the case of an anthropomorhic figurine excavated in Erfurt, some researchers including Olaf Höckmann[9] indicated those were intentionally broken, since neolithic figurines in human figure were found in fragment in high ratio among excavations in central Europe.[10][11][12]
  2. ^ Between 1631 and 1648, during the Thirty Years' War, Erfurt was occupied by Swedish forces,[20] thus the effigy of Queen Christina appears on the 1645 Erfurt 10 Ducat (Portugaloser). There are seven gold coins known to exist bearing the effigy of Queen Christina: a unique 1649 five ducat,[21] and six 1645 10 ducat specimen.[22]

References

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  9. ^ Höckmann, Olaf (1965). "Menschliche Darstellungen in der bandkeramischen Kultur" [Human representations in the band ceramic culture]. Jb. RGZM (in German). 12: 1–34.
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  31. ^ a b c d e "Denkmale Erfurts 1806–1814" [Monuments of Erfurt 1806–1814] (in German). Thüringer Naturbrief. Retrieved 3 January 2016.
  32. ^ Frank Palmowski (2015) [First published 2013]. Die Belagerung von Erfurt 1813–1814 [The Siege of Erfurt 1813–1814] (in German). Sutton Verlag. p. 82. ISBN 978-3-954-00604-5.
  33. ^ Willibald Gutsche, ed. (1989). Geschichte der Stadt Erfurt [History of the city of Erfurt] (in German) (2nd revised ed.). Weimar. ISBN 3-7400-0095-3.
  34. ^ a b Christoph Wilhelm von Koch (1838). Histoire abrégée des traités de paix entre les puissances de l'Europe depuis la paix de Westphalie, Volume 3 [Abridged history of the peace treaties between the powers of Europe since the Peace of Westphalia, Volume 3] (in French). Meline, Cans et Compagnie. Le général Kleist assiégeait Erfurt. Par suite d'une capitulation signée le 20 décembre, le générale français d'Alton se retira dans les deux forts de Petersberg et Cyriacsbourg, et la ville fut remise aux Prussiens le 6 janvier 1814. [General Kleist laid siege to Erfurt. As a result of a capitulation signed on 20 December, the French general d'Alton withdrew to the two forts of Petersberg and Cyriaksburg, and the town was handed over to the Prussians on 6 January 1814.]
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  36. ^ a b Georg Friedrich Hühn (1839), Kurzgefasste Nachricht von der Belagerung, Blokade und Einzug der Königlich Preußischen Truppen in Erfurt. Vom 21sten Oktober 1813 bis zum 8ten Januar 1814. In einem Briefe als ein Journal abgefasst, und an einen vertrauten Freund abgesendet. Bei Gelegenheit der 25jährigen Jubelfeier neu abgedruckt [Concise news of the siege, blockade and entry of the Royal Prussian troops into Erfurt. From 21 October 1813 to 8 January 1814. In a letter as a journal written and sent to a trusted friend. Reprinted on the occasion of the 25th jubilee], Erfurt.
  37. ^ Frank Palmowski (2015) [First published 2013]. Die Belagerung von Erfurt 1813–1814 [The Siege of Erfurt 1813–1814] (in German). Sutton Verlag. p. 25. ISBN 978-3-954-00604-5. Retrieved 17 January 2016. Preußische Truppen marschieren in der Stadt ein. Auf dem Anger kommt es zu Jubelszenen. Der Napoleon-Obelisk wird zerstört. [Prussian troops march into the city. On the Anger this leads to scenes of jubilation. The Napoleon obelisk is destroyed.]
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Bibliography

External links

  • Erfurt City Panoramas – Panoramic Views and virtual Tours
  • Kraemerbruecke
  • with Shawnee, Kansas
  • World Shots. Germany. Erfurt. – Collection of photographs (English, Russian, Hebrew)
  • Memorial and Museum Topf & Sons. – Builders of the Auschwitz Oven
  • Old maps of Erfurt - Eran Laor Cartographic Collection, The National Library of Israel in Historic Cities Research Project

erfurt, german, pronunciation, ˈɛʁfʊʁt, listen, capital, largest, city, central, german, state, thuringia, located, wide, valley, gera, river, progression, gera, unstrut, saale, elbe, north, southern, part, thuringian, basin, north, thuringian, forest, sits, m. Erfurt German pronunciation ˈɛʁfʊʁt listen 3 is the capital and largest city in the Central German state of Thuringia It is located in the wide valley of the Gera river progression Gera Unstrut Saale Elbe North Sea in the southern part of the Thuringian Basin north of the Thuringian Forest It sits in the middle of an almost straight line of cities consisting of the six largest Thuringian cities forming the central metropolitan corridor of the state the Thuringian City Chain Thuringer Stadtekette with more than 500 000 inhabitants stretching from Eisenach in the west via Gotha Erfurt Weimar and Jena to Gera in the east Erfurt and the city of Gottingen in southern Lower Saxony are the two cities with more than 100 000 inhabitants closest to the geographic center of Germany Erfurt is located 100 km 62 mi south west of Leipzig 250 km 155 mi north east of Frankfurt 300 km 186 mi south west of Berlin and 400 km 249 mi north of Munich ErfurtCityclockwise view over the city Merchants Bridge Kramerbrucke from above Merchants Church Kaufmannskirche houses on Cathedral Square Domplatz Cathedral Hill Domberg with Erfurt Cathedral Erfurter Dom and St Severus Church Severikirche Merchants BridgeFlagCoat of armsLocation of Erfurt within ThuringiaErfurtShow map of GermanyErfurtShow map of ThuringiaCoordinates 50 59 N 11 2 E 50 983 N 11 033 E 50 983 11 033 Coordinates 50 59 N 11 2 E 50 983 N 11 033 E 50 983 11 033CountryGermanyStateThuringiaDistrictUrban districtFounded1120First mentioned742Subdivisions53 districtsGovernment Lord mayor 2018 24 Andreas Bausewein 1 SPD Governing partiesSPD Left GreensArea Total269 17 km2 103 93 sq mi Elevation194 m 636 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total213 227 Density790 km2 2 100 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes99084 99099Dialling codes0361Vehicle registrationEFWebsitewww wbr erfurt wbr de wbr ef wbr en wbr in English Erfurt s old town is one of the best preserved medieval city centres in Germany 4 Tourist attractions include the Merchants Bridge Kramerbrucke the Old Synagogue Alte Synagoge the oldest still standing synagogue in Europe Cathedral Hill Domberg with the ensemble of Erfurt Cathedral Erfurter Dom and St Severus Church Severikirche and Petersberg Citadel Zitadelle Petersberg one of the largest and best preserved town fortresses in Central Europe 5 The city s economy is based on agriculture horticulture and microelectronics Its central location has made it a logistics hub for Germany and central Europe Erfurt hosts the second largest trade fair in eastern Germany after Leipzig as well as the public television children s channel KiKa The city is situated on the Via Regia a medieval trade and pilgrims road network Modern day Erfurt is also a hub for ICE high speed trains and other German and European transport networks Erfurt was first mentioned in 742 as Saint Boniface founded the diocese Although the town did not belong to any of the Thuringian states politically it quickly became the economic centre of the region and it was a member of the Hanseatic League 6 It was part of the Electorate of Mainz during the Holy Roman Empire and later became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1802 From 1949 until 1990 Erfurt was part of the German Democratic Republic East Germany The University of Erfurt was founded in 1379 7 making it the first university to be established within the geographic area which constitutes modern day Germany It closed in 1816 and was re established in 1994 with the main modern campus on what was a teachers training college Martin Luther 1483 1546 was its most famous student studying there from 1501 before entering St Augustine s Monastery in 1505 8 Other noted Erfurters include the medieval philosopher and mystic Meister Eckhart c 1260 1328 the Baroque composer Johann Pachelbel 1653 1706 and the sociologist Max Weber 1864 1920 Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory and antiquity 1 2 Middle Ages 1 3 Early modern period 1 4 Erfurt during the Napoleonic Wars 1 5 Since 1815 2 Geography and demographics 2 1 Topography 2 2 Climate 2 3 Administrative divisions 2 4 Demographics 3 Culture sights and cityscape 3 1 Residents notable in cultural history 3 2 Museums 3 3 Image gallery 3 4 Theatre 3 5 Sport 3 6 Cityscape 3 7 Sights and architectural heritage 3 7 1 Churches monasteries and synagogues 3 7 1 1 Catholic churches and monasteries 3 7 1 2 Protestant churches and monasteries 3 7 1 3 Former churches 3 7 1 4 Synagogues 3 7 2 Secular architecture 3 7 2 1 Street and square ensembles 3 7 2 2 Fortifications 3 7 2 3 19th and 20th century architecture in the outskirts 4 Economy and infrastructure 4 1 Agriculture industry and services 4 2 Transport 4 2 1 By rail 4 2 2 By road 4 2 3 By light rail and bus 4 2 4 By airplane 4 2 5 By bike 4 3 Education 4 4 Media 5 Politics 5 1 Mayor and city council 6 Twin towns sister cities 7 Notable people 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksHistory EditSee also Timeline of Erfurt Prehistory and antiquity Edit Erfurt is an old Germanic settlement The earliest evidence of human settlement dates from the prehistoric era archaeological finds from the north of Erfurt revealed human traces from the paleolithic period ca 10 000 BCE citation needed To the west of Erfurt in Frienstedt existed in the AD era a big Germanic village which was found during the construction of a highway Where they also discovered the oldest Germanic word ever discovered in Central Germany written in runic script was found on a comb from a sacrificial shaft the word kaba From Roman Times however they found 200 coins dating back to the third century plus 150 Roman ceramic fragments and more than 200 fibulae Also 11 inhumation graves of the Hassleben Leuna group which is an archeological cultural group The Melchendorf dig in the southern city part showed a settlement from the neolithic period note 1 The Thuringii inhabited the Erfurt area in c 480 and gave their name to Thuringia in c 500 Middle Ages Edit Erfurt woodcut from the Nuremberg Chronicle 1493 Old Synagogue the oldest in Europe 1094 Collegium maius building of the old University of Erfurt 1392 The town is first mentioned in 742 under the name of Erphesfurt in that year Saint Boniface wrote to Pope Zachary to inform him that he had established three dioceses in central Germany one of them in a place called Erphesfurt which for a long time has been inhabited by pagan natives All three dioceses the other two were Wurzburg and Buraburg were confirmed by Zachary the next year though in 755 Erfurt was brought into the diocese of Mainz 13 That the place was populous already is borne out by archeological evidence which includes 23 graves and six horse burials from the sixth and seventh centuries 14 Throughout the Middle Ages Erfurt was an important trading town because of its location near a ford across the Gera river Together with the other five Thuringian woad towns of Gotha Tennstedt Arnstadt and Langensalza it was the centre of the German woad trade which made those cities very wealthy Erfurt was the junction of important trade routes the Via Regia was one of the most used east west roads between France and Russia via Frankfurt Erfurt Leipzig and Wroclaw and another route in the north south direction was the connection between the Baltic Sea ports e g Lubeck and the potent upper Italian city states like Venice and Milan During the tenth and eleventh centuries both the Emperor and the Electorate of Mainz held some privileges in Erfurt The German kings had an important monastery on Petersberg hill and the Archbishops of Mainz collected taxes from the people Around 1100 some people became free citizens by paying the annual Freizins liberation tax which marks a first step in becoming an independent city During the 12th century as a sign of more and more independence the citizens built a city wall around Erfurt in the area of today s Juri Gagarin Ring After 1200 independence was fulfilled and a city council was founded in 1217 the town hall was built in 1275 In the following decades the council bought a city owned territory around Erfurt which consisted at its height of nearly 100 villages and castles and even another small town Sommerda Erfurt became an important regional power between the Landgraviate of Thuringia around the Electorate of Mainz to the west and the Electorate of Saxony to the east Between 1306 and 1481 Erfurt was allied with the two other major Thuringian cities Muhlhausen and Nordhausen in the Thuringian City Alliance and the three cities joined the Hanseatic League together in 1430 A peak in economic development was reached in the 15th century when the city had a population of 20 000 making it one of the largest in Germany Between 1432 and 1446 a second and higher city wall was established In 1483 a first city fortress was built on Cyriaksburg hill in the southwestern part of the town In the year 1184 Erfurt was the location of a notable accident called the Erfurter Latrinensturz Erfurt latrine fall King Henry VI held council in a building of the Erfurt Cathedral to negotiate peace between two of his vassals Archbishop Konrad I of Mainz and Landgrave Ludwig III of Thuringia The amassed weight of all the gathered men proved too heavy for the floor to bear which collapsed According to contemporary accounts dozens of people fell to their death into the latrine pit below Ludwig III Konrad I and Henry VI survived the affair 15 16 The Jewish community of Erfurt was founded in the 11th century and became together with Mainz Worms and Speyer one of the most influential in Germany Their Old Synagogue is still extant and a museum today as is the mikveh at Gera river near Kramerbrucke 17 In 1349 during the wave of Black Death Jewish persecutions across Europe the Jews of Erfurt were rounded up with more than 100 killed and the rest driven from the city Before the persecution a wealthy Jewish merchant buried his property in the basement of his house In 1998 this treasure was found during construction works The Erfurt Treasure with various gold and silver objects is shown in the exhibition in the synagogue today 18 Only a few years after 1349 the Jews moved back to Erfurt and founded a second community which was disbanded by the city council in 1458 In 1379 19 the University of Erfurt was founded Together with the University of Cologne it was one of the first city owned universities in Germany while they were usually owned by the Landesherren Some buildings of this old university are extant or restored in the Latin Quarter in the northern city centre like Collegium Maius student dorms Georgenburse and others the hospital and the church of the university The university quickly became a hotspot of German cultural life in Renaissance humanism with scholars like Ulrich von Hutten Helius Eobanus Hessus and Justus Jonas Early modern period Edit Erfurt in 1650 Kurmainzische Statthalterei seat of the governors of Erfurt at front Christina Queen of Sweden depicted on a 1645 Erfurt 10 ducat coin note 2 In 1501 Martin Luther 1483 1546 moved to Erfurt and began his studies at the university After 1505 he lived at St Augustine s Monastery as a friar In 1507 he was ordained as a priest in Erfurt Cathedral He moved permanently to Wittenberg in 1511 Erfurt was an early adopter of the Protestant Reformation in 1521 23 In 1530 the city became one of the first in Europe to be officially bi confessional with the Hammelburg Treaty It kept that status through all the following centuries The later 16th and the 17th century brought a slow economic decline of Erfurt Trade shrank the population was falling and the university lost its influence The city s independence was endangered In 1664 the city and surrounding area were brought under the dominion of the Electorate of Mainz and the city lost its independence The Electorate built a huge fortress on Petersberg hill between 1665 and 1726 to control the city and instituted a governor to rule Erfurt In 1682 and 1683 Erfurt experienced the worst plague years in its history In 1683 more than half of the population died because of the deadly disease In Erfurt witch hunts are known from 1526 to 1705 Trial records are only incomplete Twenty people were involved in witch trials and at least eight people died During the late 18th century Erfurt saw another cultural peak Governor Karl Theodor Anton Maria von Dalberg had close relations with Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Friedrich Schiller Johann Gottfried Herder Christoph Martin Wieland and Wilhelm von Humboldt who often visited him at his court in Erfurt Erfurt during the Napoleonic Wars Edit Main article Principality of Erfurt Die Napoleonshohe im Steiger bei Erfurt painted by Nikolaus Dornheim de in 1812 Inaugurated in March 1811 to celebrate Napoleon s birthday this Greek style temple with grotto flowerbeds and fountain in the Stiegerwald was burned in November 1813 and completely destroyed by Erfurters and their besiegers in 1814 Erfurt became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1802 to compensate for territories Prussia lost to France on the Left Bank of the Rhine 24 25 In the Capitulation of Erfurt the city its 12 000 Prussian and Saxon defenders under William VI Prince of Orange Nassau 65 artillery pieces and the Petersberg Citadel and Cyriaksburg Citadel Cyriaksburg were handed over to the French on 16 October 1806 26 At the time of the capitulation Joachim Murat Marshal of France had about 16 000 troops near Erfurt 27 With the attachment of the Saxe Weimar territory of Blankenhain the city became part of the First French Empire in 1806 as the Principality of Erfurt directly subordinate to Napoleon as an imperial state domain French domaine reserve a l empereur separate from the Confederation of the Rhine which the surrounding Thuringian states had joined 28 Erfurt was administered by a civilian and military Senate 29 Finanz und Domanenkammer Erfurt 28 under a French governor based in the Kurmainzische Statthalterei previously the seat of the city s governor under the Electorate 29 Napoleon first visited the principality on 23 July 1807 inspecting the citadels and fortifications 29 In 1808 the Congress of Erfurt was held with Napoleon and Alexander I of Russia visiting the city 28 During their administration the French introduced street lighting and a tax on foreign horses to pay for maintaining the road surface 28 The Peterskirche suffered under the French occupation with its inventory being auctioned off to other local churches including the organ bells and even the tower of the Corpus Christi chapel Fronleichnamskapelle and the former monastery s library being donated to the University of Erfurt and then to the Boineburg Library when the university closed in 1816 28 Similarly the Cyriaksburg Citadel was damaged by the French with the city side walls being partially dismantled in the hunt for imagined treasures from the convent workers being paid from the sale of the building materials 30 In 1811 to commemorate the birth of the Prince Imperial a 70 foot 21 metre ceremonial column Die Napoleonsaule of wood and plaster was erected on the common 28 31 Similarly the Napoleonshohe a Greek style temple topped by a winged victory with shield sword and lance and containing a bust of Napoleon sculpted by Friedrich Doll 28 31 32 was erected in the Stiegerwald woods including a grotto with fountain and flower beds using a large pond lavoratorium from the Peterskirche 31 inaugurated with ceremony on 14 August 1811 after extravagant celebrations for Napoleon s birthday 28 which were repeated in 1812 with a concert in the Predigerkirche conducted by Louis Spohr 28 With the Sixth Coalition forming after French defeat in Russia on 24 February 1813 Napoleon ordered the Petersburg Citadel to prepare for siege visiting the city on 25 April to inspect the fortifications in particular both Citadels 28 On 10 July 1813 Napoleon put Alexandre d Alton fr baron of the Empire in charge of the defences of Erfurt However when the French decreed that 1000 men would be conscripted into the Grande Armee the recruits were joined by other citizens in rioting on 19 July that led to 20 arrests of whom 2 were sentenced to death by French court martial 28 as a result the French ordered the closure of all inns and alehouses 33 Within a week of the Sixth Coalition s decisive victory at Leipzig 16 19 October 1813 however Erfurt was besieged by Prussian Austrian and Russian troops under the command of Prussian Lt Gen von Kleist 28 34 After a first capitulation signed by d Alton on 20 December 1813 the French troops withdrew to the two fortresses of Petersberg and Cyriaksburg 34 allowing for the Coalition forces to march into Erfurt on 6 January 1814 to jubilant greetings 35 36 the Napoleonsaule ceremonial column was burned and destroyed as a symbol of the citizens oppression under the French 28 31 35 37 similarly the Napoleonshohe was burned on 1 November 1813 and completely destroyed by Erfurters and their besiegers in 1814 28 31 After a call for volunteers 3 days later 300 Erfurters joined the Coalition armies in France 35 Finally in May 1814 the French capitulated fully with 1 700 French troops vacating the Petersberg and Cyriaksburg fortresses 35 During the two and a half months of siege the mortality rate rose in the city greatly 1 564 Erfurt citizens died in 1813 around a thousand more than the previous year 36 After the Congress of Vienna Erfurt was restored to Prussia on 21 June 1815 becoming the capital of one of the three districts Regierungsbezirke of the new Province of Saxony but some southern and eastern parts of Erfurter lands joined Blankenhain in being transferred to the Grand Duchy of Saxe Weimar Eisenach the following September 35 Although enclosed by Thuringian territory in the west south and east the city remained part of the Prussian Province of Saxony until 1944 Since 1815 Edit Streetscape in the southern city extension Grunderzeit style Housing projects in Bauhaus style from 1930 Hotel Erfurter Hof place of the first meeting of East and West German heads of government in 1970 After the 1848 Revolution many Germans desired to have a united national state An attempt in this direction was the failed Erfurt Union of German states in 1850 The Industrial Revolution reached Erfurt in the 1840s when the Thuringian Railway connecting Berlin and Frankfurt was built During the following years many factories in different sectors were founded One of the biggest was the Royal Gun Factory of Prussia in 1862 After the Unification of Germany in 1871 Erfurt moved from the southern border of Prussia to the centre of Germany so the fortifications of the city were no longer needed The demolition of the city fortifications in 1873 led to a construction boom in Erfurt because it was now possible to build in the area formerly occupied by the city walls and beyond Many public and private buildings emerged and the infrastructure such as a tramway hospitals and schools improved rapidly The number of inhabitants grew from 40 000 around 1870 to 130 000 in 1914 and the city expanded in all directions The Erfurt Program was adopted by the Social Democratic Party of Germany during its congress at Erfurt in 1891 Between the wars the city kept growing Housing shortages were fought with building programmes and social infrastructure was broadened according to the welfare policy in the Weimar Republic The Great Depression between 1929 and 1932 led to a disaster for Erfurt nearly one out of three became unemployed Conflicts between far left and far right oriented milieus increased and many inhabitants supported the new Nazi government and Adolf Hitler Others especially some communist workers put up resistance against the new administration In 1938 the new synagogue was destroyed during the Kristallnacht Jews lost their property and emigrated or were deported to Nazi concentration camps together with many communists In 1914 the company Topf and Sons began the manufacture of crematoria later becoming the market leader in this industry Under the Nazis JA Topf amp Sons supplied specially developed crematoria ovens and associated plants to the Auschwitz Birkenau Buchenwald and Mauthausen Gusen concentration camps On 27 January 2011 a memorial and museum dedicated to the Holocaust victims was opened at the former company premises in Erfurt 38 During World War II Erfurt experienced more than 27 British and American air raids about 1600 civilians died Bombed as a target of the Oil Campaign of World War II Erfurt suffered only limited damage and was captured on 12 April 1945 by the US 80th Infantry Division 39 On 3 July American troops left the city which then became part of the Soviet Zone of Occupation and eventually of the German Democratic Republic East Germany In 1948 Erfurt became the capital of Thuringia replacing Weimar In 1952 the Lander in the GDR were dissolved in favour of centralization under the new socialist government Erfurt then became the capital of a new Bezirk district In 1953 the Hochschule of education was founded followed by the Hochschule of medicine in 1954 the first academic institutions in Erfurt since the closing of the university in 1816 On 19 March 1970 the East and West German heads of government Willi Stoph and Willy Brandt met in Erfurt the first such meeting since the division of Germany During the 1970s and 1980s as the economic situation in GDR worsened many old buildings in city centre decayed while the government fought against the housing shortage by building large Plattenbau settlements in the periphery The Peaceful Revolution of 1989 1990 led to German reunification Socialist era street signs removed from around the city of Erfurt after 1990 With the re formation of the state of Thuringia in 1990 the city became the state capital After reunification a deep economic crisis occurred in Eastern Germany Many factories closed and many people lost their jobs and moved to the former West Germany At the same time many buildings were redeveloped and the infrastructure improved massively In 1994 the new university was opened as was the Fachhochschule in 1991 Between 2005 and 2008 the economic situation improved as the unemployment rate decreased and new enterprises developed In addition the population began to increase once again A school shooting occurred on 26 April 2002 at the Gutenberg Gymnasium Since the 1990s organized crime has gained a foothold in Erfurt with several mafia groups including the Armenian mafia present in the city Among other events there has been a robbery and an arson attack targeting the gastronomy sector and in 2014 there was a shoot out in an open street Geography and demographics Edit Gera river in the city centre Topography Edit Erfurt is situated in the south of the Thuringian basin a fertile agricultural area between the Harz mountains 80 km 50 mi to the north and the Thuringian forest 30 km 19 mi to the southwest Whereas the northern parts of the city area are flat the southern ones consist of hilly landscape up to 430 m of elevation In this part lies the municipal forest of Steigerwald with beeches and oaks as main tree species To the east and to the west are some non forested hills so that the Gera river valley within the town forms a basin North of the city are some gravel pits in operation while others are abandoned flooded and used as leisure areas Climate Edit Erfurt has a humid continental climate Dfb or an oceanic climate Cfb according to the Koppen climate classification system 40 41 Summers are warm and sometimes humid with average high temperatures of 23 C 73 F and lows of 12 C 54 F Winters are relatively cold with average high temperatures of 2 C 36 F and lows of 3 C 27 F The city s topography creates a microclimate caused by the location inside a basin with sometimes inversion in winter quite cold nights under 20 C 4 F and inadequate air circulation in summer Annual precipitation is only 502 millimeters 19 8 in with moderate rainfall throughout the year Light snowfall mainly occurs from December through February but snow cover does not usually remain for long Climate data for Erfurt 1981 2010 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 2 3 36 1 3 3 37 9 8 0 46 4 13 1 55 6 17 7 63 9 20 4 68 7 23 2 73 8 23 1 73 6 18 4 65 1 13 1 55 6 6 9 44 4 2 9 37 2 12 7 54 9 Average low C F 3 1 26 4 2 9 26 8 0 3 32 5 3 3 37 9 7 5 45 5 10 4 50 7 12 5 54 5 12 3 54 1 9 1 48 4 5 4 41 7 1 4 34 5 2 0 28 4 4 5 40 1 Average rainfall mm inches 24 1 0 95 25 5 1 00 39 1 1 54 42 1 1 66 63 9 2 52 57 1 2 25 72 8 2 87 54 4 2 14 46 8 1 84 34 7 1 37 43 4 1 71 35 1 1 38 539 21 23 Mean monthly sunshine hours 60 9 79 2 118 3 173 0 211 0 209 2 223 4 208 6 153 4 117 2 60 5 44 6 1 659 3Source Meteoclimat Administrative divisions Edit Districts of Erfurt Erfurt abuts the districts of Sommerda municipalities Witterda Elxleben Walschleben Riethnordhausen Noda Alperstedt Grossrudestedt Udestedt Kleinmolsen and Grossmolsen in the north Weimarer Land municipalities Niederzimmern Nohra Monchenholzhausen and Klettbach in the east Ilm Kreis municipalities Kirchheim Rockhausen and Amt Wachsenburg in the south and Gotha municipalities Nesse Apfelstadt Nottleben Zimmernsupra and Bienstadt in the west The city itself is divided into 53 districts The centre is formed by the district Altstadt old town and the Grunderzeit districts Andreasvorstadt in the northwest Johannesvorstadt in the northeast Krampfervorstadt in the east Daberstedt in the southeast Lobervorstadt in the southwest and Bruhlervorstadt in the west More former industrial districts are Ilversgehofen incorporated in 1911 Hohenwinden and Sulzer Siedlung in the north Another group of districts is marked by Plattenbau settlements constructed during the DDR period Berliner Platz Moskauer Platz Rieth Roter Berg and Johannesplatz in the northern as well as Melchendorf Wiesenhugel and Herrenberg in the southern city parts Finally there are many villages with an average population of approximately 1 000 which were incorporated during the 20th century however they have mostly stayed rural to date Alach incorporated 1994 Azmannsdorf 1994 Bindersleben 1950 Bischleben Stedten 1950 Bussleben 1994 Dittelstedt 1994 Egstedt 1994 Ermstedt 1994 Frienstedt 1994 Gispersleben 1950 Gottstedt 1994 Hochheim 1938 Hochstedt 1994 Kerspleben 1994 Kuhnhausen 1994 Linderbach 1994 Marbach 1950 Mittelhausen 1994 Mobisburg Rhoda 1950 Molsdorf 1994 Niedernissa 1994 Rohda 1994 Salomonsborn 1994 Schaderode 1994 Schmira 1950 Schwerborn 1994 Stotternheim 1994 Tiefthal 1994 Tottelstadt 1994 Tottleben 1994 Urbich 1994 Vieselbach 1994 Wallichen 1994 Waltersleben 1994 Windischholzhausen 1994 Demographics Edit History of the population from 1493 to 2014 Historical populationYearPop 149318 680 162019 000 1 7 163213 000 31 6 171014 338 10 3 180216 938 18 1 181714 846 12 4 187143 616 193 8 190085 202 95 3 1910111 463 30 8 1925136 555 22 5 1933146 270 7 1 1939165 615 13 2 1951190 487 15 0 1961186 369 2 2 1971198 265 6 4 1976205 483 3 6 1981212 012 3 2 1986217 134 2 4 1991204 912 5 6 1996208 179 1 6 2001200 126 3 9 2011206 384 3 1 2016211 113 2 3 2019213 981 1 4 Population size may be affected by changes in administrative divisions The largest groups of foreign residents 42 Nationality Population 31 December 2017 Syria 2 415Poland 2 025Afghanistan 1 015Russia 870Romania 790Around the year 1500 the city had 18 000 inhabitants and was one of the largest cities in the Holy Roman Empire The population then more or less stagnated until the 19th century The population of Erfurt was 21 000 in 1820 and increased to 32 000 in 1847 the year of rail connection as industrialization began In the following decades Erfurt grew up to 130 000 at the beginning of World War I and 190 000 inhabitants in 1950 A maximum was reached in 1988 with 220 000 persons The bad economic situation in eastern Germany after the reunification resulted in a decline in population which fell to 200 000 in 2002 before rising again to 206 000 in 2011 The average growth of population between 2009 and 2012 was approximately 0 68 p a whereas the population in bordering rural regions is shrinking with accelerating tendency Suburbanization played only a small role in Erfurt It occurred after reunification for a short time in the 1990s but most of the suburban areas were situated within the administrative city borders The birth deficit was 200 in 2012 this is 1 0 per 1 000 inhabitants Thuringian average 4 5 national average 2 4 The net migration rate was 8 3 per 1 000 inhabitants in 2012 Thuringian average 0 8 national average 4 6 43 The most important regions of origin of Erfurt migrants are rural areas of Thuringia Saxony Anhalt and Saxony as well as foreign countries like Poland Russia Syria Afghanistan and Hungary Like other eastern German cities foreigners account only for a small share of Erfurt s population circa 3 0 are non Germans by citizenship and overall 5 9 are migrants according to the 2011 EU census Due to the official atheism of the former GDR most of the population is non religious 14 8 are members of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany and 6 8 are Catholics according to the 2011 EU census The Jewish Community consists of 500 members Most of them migrated to Erfurt from Russia and Ukraine in the 1990s Culture sights and cityscape EditResidents notable in cultural history Edit See also List of people from Erfurt The theologian philosopher and mystic Meister Eckhart c 1260 1328 entered the Dominican monastery Predigerkloster in Erfurt when he was aged about 18 around 1275 Eckhart was the Dominican prior at Erfurt from 1294 until 1298 and Vicar of Thuringia from 1298 to 1302 After a year in Paris he returned to Erfurt in 1303 and administered his duties as Provincial of Saxony from there until 1311 44 Martin Luther 1483 1546 studied law and philosophy at the University of Erfurt from 1501 He lived in St Augustine s Monastery in Erfurt as a friar from 1505 to 1511 45 Johann Pachelbel 1653 1706 served as organist at the Predigerkirche Preachers Church in Erfurt from June 1678 until August 1690 Pachelbel composed approximately seventy pieces for organ while in Erfurt The city is the birthplace of one of Johann Sebastian Bach s cousins Johann Bernhard Bach as well as Johann Sebastian Bach s father Johann Ambrosius Bach Bach s parents were married in 1668 in the Kaufmannskirche Merchant s Church that still exists on the main square of Anger Alexander Muller 1808 1863 pianist conductor and composer was born in Erfurt He later moved to Zurich where he served as leader of the General Music Society s subscription concerts series Max Weber 1864 1920 was born in Erfurt 46 He was a sociologist philosopher lawyer and political economist whose ideas have profoundly influenced modern social theory and social research After 1906 the composer Richard Wetz 1875 1935 lived in Erfurt and became the leading person in the city s musical life His major works were written here including three symphonies a Requiem and a Christmas Oratorio The textile designer Margaretha Reichardt 1907 1984 was born and died in Erfurt She studied at the Bauhaus from 1926 to 1930 47 and while there worked with Marcel Breuer on his innovative chair designs Her former home and weaving workshop in Erfurt the Margaretha Reichardt Haus is now a museum managed by the Angermuseum Erfurt Famous contemporary musicians from Erfurt are Clueso the Boogie Pimps and Yvonne Catterfeld Museums Edit Erfurt has a great variety of museums The Stadtmuseum municipal museum shows aspects of Erfurt s history with a focus on the Middle Ages early modern history Martin Luther and the university Other parts of the Stadtmuseum are the Neue Muhle new mill an old water mill still in operation and the Benaryspeicher Benary s magazine with an exhibition of old printing machines The Alte Synagoge Old Synagogue is one of the oldest synagogue buildings in Europe 48 It is now a museum of local Jewish history It houses facsimiles of medieval Hebrew manuscripts and the Erfurt Treasure a hoard of coins and goldsmiths work that is assumed to have belonged to Jews who hid them in 1349 at the time of the Black Death pogroms The Erinnerungsort Topf amp Sohne Topf and Sons memorial is on the site of the factory of the company which constructed crematoria for Auschwitz and other concentration camps Its exhibitions explore the collaboration of a civilian company with the National Socialist regime in the holocaust Memorial and Education Centre Andreasstrasse Stasi Museum On the site of the former Erfurt Stasi prison where over 5000 people were held On 4 December 1989 the building was occupied by local residents It was the first of many such takeovers of Stasi buildings in the former East Germany 49 Today it has exhibitions on the history of East Germany and the activities of its regime The Angermuseum is one of the main art museums of Erfurt named after Anger Square where it is located It focuses on modern graphic arts medieval sculpture and early modern artisanal handicraft The Kunsthalle Erfurt Erfurt City Art Gallery has exhibitions of contemporary art of local national and international artists The Margaretha Reichardt Haus is the home and workshop of the textile designer and former Bauhaus student Margaretha Reichardt 1907 1984 50 The Peterskirche Saint Peter s church houses an exhibition of concrete art i e totally abstract art not art made out of concrete The Deutsches Gartenbaumuseum German Horticulture Museum is housed at the Cyriaksburg Citadel 51 The Naturkundemuseum Natural History Museum is situated in a medieval woad warehouse and explores Thuringian flora and fauna geology and ecology The Museum fur Thuringer Volkskunde Museum of Folk Art and Cultural Anthropology looks at the ordinary life of people in Thuringia in the past and shows exhibits of peasant and artisan traditions The Elektromuseum Museum of Electrical Engineering shows the history of electric engines which have featured prominently in Erfurt s economy Schloss Molsdorf de in the district of Molsdorf is a Baroque palace with an exhibition about the painter Otto Knopfer de Image gallery Edit Stadtmuseum Angermuseum Naturkundemuseum Deutsches Gartenbaumuseum Museum fur Thuringer Volkskunde J A Topf amp Sohne museum and holocaust memorial site Memorial and Education Centre Andreasstrasse former Stasi prison Schloss MolsdorfTheatre Edit Since 2003 the modern opera house is home to Theater Erfurt and its Philharmonic Orchestra The grand stage section has 800 seats and the studio stage can hold 200 spectators In September 2005 the opera Waiting for the Barbarians by Philip Glass premiered in the opera house The Erfurt Theatre has been a source of controversy In 2005 a performance of Engelbert Humperdinck s opera Hansel und Gretel stirred up the local press since the performance contained suggestions of pedophilia and incest The opera was advertised in the programme with the addition for adults only On 12 April 2008 a version of Verdi s opera Un ballo in maschera directed by Johann Kresnik opened at the Erfurt Theatre The production stirred deep controversy by featuring nude performers in Mickey Mouse masks dancing on the ruins of the World Trade Center and a female singer with a painted on Hitler toothbrush moustache performing a straight arm Nazi salute along with sinister portrayals of American soldiers Uncle Sam and Elvis Presley impersonators The director described the production as a populist critique of modern American society aimed at showing up the disparities between rich and poor The controversy prompted one local politician to call for locals to boycott the performances but this was largely ignored and the premiere was sold out 52 Sport Edit Gunda Niemann Stirnemann Halle The Messe Erfurt serves as home court for the Oettinger Rockets a professional basketball team in Germany s first division the Basketball Bundesliga Notable types of sport in Erfurt are athletics ice skating cycling with the oldest velodrome in use in the world opened in 1885 swimming handball volleyball tennis and football The city s football club FC Rot Weiss Erfurt is member of 3 Fussball Liga and based in Steigerwaldstadion with a capacity of 20 000 The Gunda Niemann Stirnemann Halle was the second indoor speed skating arena in Germany Cityscape Edit Architecture from the Grunderzeit in Bruhlervorstadt district Erfurt s cityscape features a medieval core of narrow curved alleys in the centre surrounded by a belt of Grunderzeit architecture created between 1873 and 1914 In 1873 the city s fortifications were demolished and it became possible to build houses in the area in front of the former city walls In the following years Erfurt saw a construction boom In the northern area districts Andreasvorstadt Johannesvorstadt and Ilversgehofen tenements for the factory workers were built whilst the eastern area Krampfervorstadt and Daberstedt featured apartments for white collar workers and clerks and the southwestern part Lobervorstadt and Bruhlervorstadt with its beautiful valley landscape saw the construction of villas and mansions of rich factory owners and notables During the interwar period some settlements in Bauhaus style were realized often as housing cooperatives After World War II and over the whole GDR period housing shortages remained a problem even though the government started a big apartment construction programme Between 1970 and 1990 large Plattenbau settlements with high rise blocks on the northern for 50 000 inhabitants and southeastern for 40 000 inhabitants periphery were constructed After reunification the renovation of old houses in city centre and the Grunderzeit areas was a big issue The federal government granted substantial subsidies so that many houses could be restored Compared to many other German cities little of Erfurt was destroyed in World War II This is one reason why the centre today offers a mixture of medieval Baroque and Neoclassical architecture as well as buildings from the last 150 years Public green spaces are located along Gera river and in several parks like the Stadtpark the Nordpark and the Sudpark The largest green area is the Egapark de a horticultural exhibition park and botanic garden established in 1961 Sights and architectural heritage Edit Churches monasteries and synagogues Edit St Mary s Cathedral left and St Severus Church right on Domberg hill The city centre has about 25 churches and monasteries most of them in Gothic style some also in Romanesque style or a mixture of Romanesque and Gothic elements and a few in later styles The various steeples characterize the medieval centre and led to one of Erfurt s nicknames as the Thuringian Rome 53 Catholic churches and monasteries Edit The Allerheiligenkirche All Saints Church is a 14th century Gothic church in Marktstrasse Market Street which hosts a columbarium The Dom St Marien St Mary s Cathedral perches above Domplatz the Cathedral Square It is the episcopal see and one of the main sights of Erfurt It combines Romanesque and Gothic elements and has the largest free swinging medieval bell in the world 54 which is named Gloriosa One of the works of art inside the cathedral is Lucas Cranach the Elder s The Mystic Marriage of St Catherine painted around 1520 55 The Lorenzkirche St Lawrence s Church is a small 14th century Gothic parish church at Anger Square The Martinikirche St Martin s Church was built in the 15th century in Gothic style and in 1755 58 converted to Baroque style It was both a Cistercian nunnery and a parish church of Bruhl a medieval suburban zone The Neuwerkskirche St Crucis church of the new facility Holy Cross Church is a 15th century Gothic church at Neuwerkstrasse that was later converted to Baroque style Until 1285 it was used by a convent of Augustinian nuns The Schottenkirche St Nikolai und St Jakobi Scots Monks Church of St Nicholas and St James is an 11th century Romanesque monastery church with a Baroque facade which was later used as a parish church The Severikirche St Severus Church is the second largest parish church after the cathedral and stands next to it on the Domberg hill It is in Gothic style and was built around 1300 The Ursulinenkirche St Ursula s Church is a Gothic church at Anger Square It is attached to the Ursulinenkloster St Ursula s Nunnery founded in 1136 56 It is the only medieval monastery or nunnery in Erfurt which has been in continuous operation since it opened The Wigbertikirche St Wigbert s Church is a 15th century Gothic church near Anger Square All Saints Church St Lawrence s Church St Martin s Church Holy Cross Church Schottenkirche St Severus Church Ursulines Church St Wigbert s ChurchProtestant churches and monasteries Edit Agidienkirche St Giles Church is a 14th century Gothic parish church at Wenigemarkt Square It is the surviving one of formerly two bridge head churches of the Kramerbrucke located on both ends of the bridge As a result the nave is on the first floor while on ground level is a passage to the bridge The steeple is open to the public and offers a good view over the city centre Today St Giles Church is a Methodist parish church Andreaskirche St Andrew s Church is a 14th century Gothic parish church at Andreasstrasse Andrew s Street The old craftsmen s quarter around it is named Andreasviertel after the church Augustinerkloster St Augustine s Monastery dates from 1277 Martin Luther lived there as a monk between 1505 and 1511 The site has had a varied history and the restored complex has both modern and medieval buildings Today it belongs to the Evangelical Church in Germany and as well as being a place of worship it is also a meeting and conference centre and provides simple guest accommodation In 2016 an application was made for it to be included in the already existing UNESCO World Heritage Site Luther sites in Central Germany 57 The Kaufmannskirche St Gregor Merchant s Church of St Gregory is a 14th century Gothic parish church at Anger square It is one of the largest and most important original parish churches in Erfurt The parents of Johann Sebastian Bach Johann Ambrosius Bach and Maria Elisabeth Lammerhirt married here in 1668 Michaeliskirche St Michael s Church is a 13th century Gothic parish church at Michaelisstrasse It became the church of the university in 1392 Erfurt s first Protestant sermon was preached here in 1521 58 The church tower contains Erfurt s oldest bell Katharina 58 dating from 1380 The Predigerkirche Dominican Church is a Gothic monastery church of the Dominicans at Predigerstrasse Since the Reformation in the 16th century it is the main Protestant church of Erfurt and furthermore one of the largest former churches of the mendicant orders in Germany The theologian and mystic Meister Eckhart c 1260 1328 entered Prediger Monastery around 1275 He was Prior from 1294 until 1298 and Vicar of Thuringia from 1298 to 1302 After a year in Paris he returned to the monastery in 1303 and administered his duties as Provincial of Saxony from there until 1311 59 The baroque composer Johann Pachelbel 1653 1706 was organist at the church from 1678 until 1690 The Reglerkirche St Augustinus Regulated St Augustine s Church is a 12th century Romanesque Gothic monastery church of the Augustinians at Bahnhofstrasse Station Street After the Reformation it became a Protestant parish church St Giles Church St Andrew s Church St Augustine s Church Merchants Church St Michael s Church Dominican Church Regulated St Augustine s ChurchFormer churches Edit The Barfusserkirche is a 14th century Gothic mendicant church at Barfusserstrasse The former Franciscan monastery became a Protestant parish church after the Reformation In 1944 the church was severely damaged by Allied bombing Its high choir was restored but the nave s ruins have been preserved as a war memorial The Bartholomauskirche St Bartholomew s Church was a Gothic parish church at Anger Square The church was demolished in 1715 and only the steeple remained Today the tower hosts a carillon with 60 bells The Georgskirche St George s Church was a parish church in Michaelisstrasse It was demolished in 1632 and only the church tower now remains The Hospitalkirche Hospital Church was the church of the former Great City Hospital at Juri Gagarin Ring It is a 14th century Gothic building and is used today as a depot by the Museum fur Thuringer Volkskunde Museum of Thuringian Ethnology 60 The Johanneskirche St John s Church was a parish church at John s Street It was demolished in 1819 but the steeple remained The Kartauserkirche St Salvatorberg Carthusian Church Mount St Saviour was a monastery church at Kartauser strasse The Baroque church was closed in 1803 and afterwards used for many different purposes Today it is part of a housing complex The Nikolaikirche St Nicholas Church was a parish church in Augustine s Street It was demolished in 1747 and only the steeple remained The Paulskirche St Paul s Church was a parish church in Paul s Street It was demolished before 1759 The steeple remains and is in use as the belfry of the Prediger Church The Peterskirche St Peter s Church was built in the 12th century in Romanesque style as a church of the Benedictine monastery of St Peter and Paul on Petersberg hill now the site of Petersberg Citadel It was secularised in 1803 and used as a military store house Today it houses an art gallery Ruins of the former Franciscan monastery s church St Bartholomew s steeple Hospital Church Carthusian Church St Nicholas steeple St Paul s steeple St Peter s ChurchSynagogues Edit The oldest parts of Erfurt s Alte Synagoge Old Synagogue date to the 11th century It was used until 1349 when the Jewish community was destroyed in a pogrom known as the Erfurt Massacre The building had many other uses since then It was conserved in the 1990s and in 2009 it became a museum of Jewish history 48 A rare Mikveh a ritual bath dating from c 1250 was discovered by archeologists in 2007 17 It has been accessible to visitors on guided tours since September 2011 61 In 2015 the Old Synagogue and Mikveh were nominated as a World Heritage Site It has been tentatively listed but a final decision has not yet been made 62 As religious freedom was granted in the 19th century some Jews returned to Erfurt They built their synagogue on the banks of the Gera river and used it from 1840 until 1884 The neoclassical building is known as the Kleine Synagoge Small Synagogue Today it is used an events centre It is also open to visitors 63 A larger synagogue the Grosse Synagoge Great Synagogue was opened in 1884 because the community had become larger and wealthier This moorish style building was destroyed during nationwide Nazi riots known as Kristallnacht on 9 10 November 1938 64 In 1947 the land which the Great Synagogue had occupied was returned to the Jewish community and they built their current place of worship the Neue Synagoge New Synagogue which opened in 1952 It was the only synagogue building erected under communist rule in East Germany 65 Old Synagogue Small Synagogue New SynagogueSecular architecture Edit Besides the religious buildings there is a lot of historic secular architecture in Erfurt mostly concentrated in the city centre but some 19th and 20th century buildings are located on the outskirts The Michaelisstrasse is known as the lithic chronicle of Erfurt Street and square ensembles Edit The Kramerbrucke Merchants bridge is the most famous tourist attraction of Erfurt This 15th century bridge is completely covered with dwellings and unique in Europe north of the Alps Today there are some art handicraft and souvenir shops in the houses The Domplatz Cathedral Square is the largest square in Erfurt and one of the largest historical market squares in Germany The cathedral and St Severus Church on its western side can be reached over the Domstufen a wide flight of stairs On the north side lies the courthouse a historic building from 1880 The eastern and southern side is fronted by early modern patrician houses On the square are the Minerva Fountain from 1784 and the Erthal Obelisk from 1777 The Domplatz is the main setting of the Erfurt Christmas Market in December and the location for DomStufen Festival an open air theatre festival in summer The Fischmarkt Fish Market is the central square of Erfurt s city centre It is surrounded by renaissance style patrician houses and the town hall a neo gothic building from 1882 In the middle of the square is a statue called Romer Roman a symbol of the city s independence erected by the citizens in 1591 The Wenigemarkt Minor Market is a small square on the east side of the Gera river opposite to the Fischmarkt on the west side surrounded by early modern patrician and merchants houses The fountain on this square with the sculpture Scuffling Boys was created in 1975 Today Wenigemarkt square also has various cafes and bars Next to the Wenigemarkt in Futterstrasse is the Kaisersaal building a neoclassicistic event hall from 1831 current building The Congress of Erfurt took place here in 1808 The Anger originally the German term for village green is a protracted square clarification needed in the eastern city centre All tram lines are linked here so that it became the new city centre during the 20th century with many important buildings On its northern side is the main post office built in 1886 in neo gothic style with its prominent clock tower In the north east there is the Martin Luther monument from 1889 in front of the Merchants Church Between the church and the Ursuline monastery lies the Anger 1 department store from 1908 On the south side next to Station Street is the Angermuseum the art history museum of Erfurt inside a Baroque palace from 1711 The western part of Anger square is surrounded by large historicist business houses from the late 19th century The west end of the square is marked by the Angerbrunnen fountain from 1890 The Jesuit College near Schlosserstrasse was built in 1737 and used until the ban of the Jesuits in 1773 The Willy Brandt Square is the southern gate to the city centre in front of the main station Opposite to the station is the former hotel Erfurter Hof where the first meeting of the East and West German heads of government took place in 1970 On the western side is the building of the old Erfurt station 1847 95 with a clock tower and the former offices of the Thuringian Railway Company The Hirschgarten Deer Garden is a small park in front of the Thuringian government seat in the western city centre The minister president s seat is the Kurmainzische Statthalterei a Renaissance Baroque palace from the 17th century The Michaelisstrasse Michael s Street is known as the lithic chronicle of Erfurt because of its mostly medieval buildings It is the main street of the Latin quarter around the old university and today one of the favourite nightlife districts of the Erfurters with various bars restaurants and cafes The central building of the old university Collegium Maius was built in 1515 destroyed by Allied bombs in 1945 and originally rebuilt in 1999 The Juri Gagarin Ring is an inner city circular road following the former inner city wall The road was set out in the 1890s by closing a branch of the Gera river The buildings along the street originate from all periods of the 20th century including some GDR era highrise residence buildings An old building complex here is the former Great Hospital established in the 14th century Today it hosts the museum of popular art and cultural anthropology The Andreasviertel St Andrew s Quarter is a small quarter in the northern part of the city centre between Domplatz in the south west and Moritzwallstrasse in the north east It was the former craftsmen quarter with narrow alleys and old 16th 17th century little houses During the 20th century there were plans to demolish the quarter because of its bad housing conditions After 1990 the houses were redeveloped by private individuals so that it is one of the favourite neighbourhoods today The largest building here is the former Municipal Corn Storage in Gothic style from 1466 with a floor area of 1 800 m2 19 375 sq ft Kramerbrucke Christmas market at Domplatz Fischmarkt Wenigemarkt Post office at Anger Angermuseum HirschgartenFortifications Edit Petersberg Citadel From 1066 until 1873 the old town of Erfurt was encircled by a fortified wall About 1168 this was extended to run around the western side of Petersberg hill enclosing it within the city boundaries 66 After German Unification in 1871 Erfurt became part of the newly created German Empire The threat to the city from its Saxon neighbours and from Bavaria was no longer present so it was decided to dismantle the city walls Only a few remnants remain today A piece of inner wall can be found in a small park at the corner Juri Gagarin Ring and Johannesstrasse and another piece at the flood ditch Flutgraben near Franckestrasse There is also a small restored part of the wall in the Bruhler Garten behind the Catholic orphanage Only one of the wall s fortified towers was left standing on Boyneburgufer but this was destroyed in an air raid in 1944 66 The Petersberg Citadel is one of the largest and best preserved city fortresses in Europe covering an area of 36 hectares in the north west of the city centre It was built from 1665 on Petersberg hill and was in military use until 1963 Since 1990 it has been significantly restored and is now open to the public as an historic site 67 The Cyriaksburg Citadel de is a smaller citadel south west of the city centre dating from 1480 Today it houses the German horticulture museum 68 19th and 20th century architecture in the outskirts Edit Between 1873 and 1914 a belt of Grunderzeit architecture emerged around the city centre The mansion district in the south west around Cyriakstrasse Richard Breslau Strasse and Hochheimer Strasse hosts some interesting Grunderzeit and Art Nouveau buildings The Muhlenviertel mill quarter is an area of beautiful Art Nouveau apartment buildings cobblestone streets and street trees just to the north of the old city in the vicinity of Nord Park bordered by the Gera river on its east side The Schmale Gera stream runs through the area In the Middle Ages numerous small enterprises using the power of water mills occupied the area hence the name Muhlenviertel with street names such as Waidmuhlenweg woad or indigo mill way Storchmuhlenweg stork mill way and Papiermuhlenweg paper mill way The Bauhaus style is represented by some housing cooperative projects in the east around Flensburger Strasse and Dortmunder Strasse and in the north around Neuendorfstrasse Lutherkirke Church in Magdeburger Allee 1927 is an Art Deco building The former malt factory Wolff at Theo Neubauer Strasse in the east of Erfurt is a large industrial complex built between 1880 and 1939 and in use until 2000 A new use has not been found yet but the area is sometimes used as a location in movie productions because of its atmosphere Examples of Nazi architecture include the buildings of the Landtag Thuringian parliament and Thuringenhalle an event hall in the south at Arnstadter Strasse While the Landtag building 1930s represents more the neo Roman fascist style Thuringenhalle 1940s is marked by some neo Germanic Heimatschutz style elements The Stalinist early GDR style is manifested in the main building of the university at Nordhauser Strasse 1953 and the later more international modern GDR style is represented by the horticultural exhibition centre Egapark at Gothaer Strasse the Plattenbau housing complexes like Rieth or Johannesplatz and the redevelopment of Lobertor and Krampfertor area along Juri Gagarin Ring in the city centre The current international glass and steel architecture is dominant among most larger new buildings like the Federal Labour Court of Germany 1999 the new opera house 2003 the new main station 2007 the university library the Erfurt Messe convention centre and the Gunda Niemann Stirnemann ice rink Grunderzeit tenements in Johannesvorstadt district Cubistic fountain in a Bauhaus housing complex Art Deco Luther s Church Entrance of the Thuringian parliament Lobby of the university main building GDR architecture in Johannesplatz district Inner yard of the Federal Labour CourtEconomy and infrastructure EditDuring recent years the economic situation of the city improved the unemployment rate declined from 21 in 2005 to 9 in 2013 Nevertheless some 14 000 households with 24 500 persons 12 of population are dependent upon state social benefits Hartz IV Agriculture industry and services Edit Former factory building now reused for services Anger 1 a big department store in centre Farming has a great tradition in Erfurt the cultivation of woad made the city rich during the Middle Ages Today horticulture and the production of flower seeds is still an important business in Erfurt There is also growing of fruits like apples strawberries and sweet cherries vegetables e g cauliflowers potatoes cabbage and sugar beets and grain on more than 60 of the municipal territory Industrialization in Erfurt started around 1850 Until World War I many factories were founded in different sectors like engine building shoes guns malt and later electro technics so that there was no industrial monoculture in the city After 1945 the companies were nationalized by the GDR government which led to the decline of some of them After reunification nearly all factories were closed either because they failed to successfully adopt to a free market economy or because the German government sold them to west German businessmen who closed them to avoid competition to their own enterprises citation needed However in the early 1990s the federal government started to subsidize the foundation of new companies It still took a long time before the economic situation stabilized around 2006 Since this time unemployment has decreased and overall new jobs were created Today there are many small and medium sized companies in Erfurt with electro technics semiconductors and photovoltaics in focus Engine production food production the Braugold brewery and Born Feinkost a producer of Thuringian mustard remain important industries Erfurt is an Oberzentrum which means supra centre according to Central place theory in German regional planning Such centres are always hubs of service businesses and public services like hospitals universities research trade fairs retail etc Additionally Erfurt is the capital of the federal state of Thuringia so that there are many institutions of administration like all the Thuringian state ministries and some nationwide authorities Typical for Erfurt are the logistic business with many distribution centres of big companies the Erfurt Trade Fair and the media sector with KiKa and MDR as public broadcast stations A growing industry is tourism due to the various historical sights of Erfurt There are 4 800 hotel beds and in 2012 450 000 overnight visitors spent a total of 700 000 nights in hotels Nevertheless most tourists are one day visitors from Germany The Christmas Market in December attracts some 2 000 000 visitors each year Transport Edit Erfurt Hauptbahnhof Erfurt s main railway station By rail Edit The ICE railway network puts Erfurt 11 2 hours from Berlin 21 2 hours from Frankfurt 2 hours from Dresden and 45 minutes from Leipzig In 2017 the ICE line to Munich opened making the trip to Erfurt main station only 21 2 hours 69 There are regional trains from Erfurt to Weimar Jena Gotha Eisenach Bad Langensalza Magdeburg Nordhausen Gottingen Muhlhausen Wurzburg Meiningen Ilmenau Arnstadt and Gera In freight transport there is an intermodal terminal in the district of Vieselbach Guterverkehrszentrum GVZ with connections to rail and the autobahn By road Edit The two Autobahnen crossing each other nearby at Erfurter Kreuz are the Bundesautobahn 4 Frankfurt Dresden and the Bundesautobahn 71 Schweinfurt Sangerhausen Together with the east tangent both motorways form a circle road around the city and lead the interregional traffic around the centre Whereas the A 4 was built in the 1930s the A 71 came into being after the reunification in the 1990s and 2000s In addition to both motorways there are two Bundesstrassen the Bundesstrasse 7 connects Erfurt parallel to A 4 with Gotha in the west and Weimar in the east The Bundesstrasse 4 is a connection between Erfurt and Nordhausen in the north Its southern part to Coburg was annulled when A 71 was finished in this section the A 71 now effectively serves as B 4 Within the circle road B 7 and B 4 are also annulled so that the city government has to pay for maintenance instead of the German federal government The access to the city is restricted as Umweltzone since 2012 for some vehicles Large parts of the inner city are a pedestrian area which can not be reached by car except for residents By light rail and bus Edit Light rail tram near Anger square The Erfurt public transport system is marked by the area wide Erfurt Stadtbahn light rail network established as a tram system in 1883 upgraded to a light rail Stadtbahn system in 1997 70 and continually expanded and upgraded through the 2000s Today there are six Stadtbahn lines running every ten minutes on every light rail route Additionally Erfurt operates a bus system which connects the sparsely populated outer districts of the region to the city center Both systems are organized by SWE EVAG a transit company owned by the city administration Trolleybuses were in service in Erfurt from 1948 until 1975 but are no longer in service By airplane Edit Erfurt Weimar Airport lies 3 km 2 mi west of the city centre It is linked to the central train station via Stadtbahn tram It was significantly extended in the 1990s with flights mostly to Mediterranean holiday destinations and to London during the peak Christmas market tourist season Connections to longer haul flights are easily accessible via Frankfurt Airport which can be reached in 2 hours via a direct train from Frankfurt Airport to Erfurt and from Leipzig Halle Airport which can be reached within half an hour By bike Edit Biking is becoming increasingly popular since construction of high quality cycle tracks began in the 1990s There are cycle lanes for general commuting within Erfurt city Long distance trails such as the Gera track and the Radweg Thuringer Stadtekette Thuringian cities trail connect points of tourist interest The former runs along the Gera river valley from the Thuringian forest to the river Unstrut the latter follows the medieval Via Regia from Eisenach to Altenburg via Gotha Erfurt Weimar and Jena The Rennsteig Cycle Way was opened in 2000 This designated high grade hiking and bike trail runs along the ridge of the Thuringian Central Uplands The bike trail about 200 km 124 mi long occasionally departs from the course of the historic Rennsteig hiking trail which dates back to the 1300s to avoid steep inclines It is therefore about 30 km 19 mi longer than the hiking trail The Rennsteig is connected to the E3 European long distance path which goes from the Atlantic coast of Spain to the Black Sea coast of Bulgaria and the E6 European long distance path running from Arctic Finland to Turkey Education Edit After reunification the educational system was reorganized The University of Erfurt founded in 1379 19 and closed in 1816 was refounded in 1994 with a focus on social sciences modern languages humanities and teacher training Today there are approximately 6 000 students working within four faculties the Max Weber Center for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies and three academic research institutes 71 The university has an international reputation and participates in international student exchange programmes 72 The Fachhochschule Erfurt is a university of applied sciences founded in 1991 which offers a combination of academic training and practical experience in subjects such as social work and social pedagogy business studies and engineering There are nearly 5 000 students in six faculties of which the faculty of landscaping and horticulture has a national reputation The International University of Applied Sciences Bad Honnef Bonn IUBH is a privately run university with a focus on business and economics It merged with the former Adam Ries Fachhochschule in 2013 The world renowned Bauhaus design school was founded in 1919 in the city of Weimar 73 approximately 20 km 12 mi from Erfurt 12 minutes by train The buildings are now part of a World Heritage Site and are today used by the Bauhaus Universitat Weimar which teaches design arts media and technology related subjects Furthermore there are eight Gymnasien six state owned one Catholic and one Protestant Evangelisches Ratsgymnasium Erfurt One of the state owned schools is a Sportgymnasium an elite boarding school for young talents in athletics swimming ice skating or football Another state owned school Albert Schweitzer Gymnasium offers a focus in sciences as an elite boarding school in addition to the common curriculum Media Edit The German national public television children s channel KiKa is based in Erfurt MDR Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk a radio and television company has a broadcast centre and studios in Erfurt The Thuringer Allgemeine is a statewide newspaper that is headquartered in the city 74 Politics EditMayor and city council Edit Results of the second round of the 2018 mayoral election The first freely elected mayor after German reunification was Manfred Ruge of the Christian Democratic Union who served from 1990 to 2006 Since 2006 Andreas Bausewein of the Social Democratic Party SPD has been mayor The most recent mayoral election was held on 15 April 2018 with a runoff held on 29 April and the results were as follows Candidate Party First round Second roundVotes Votes Andreas Bausewein Social Democratic Party 25 450 30 4 35 432 58 5Marion Walsmann Christian Democratic Union 18 348 21 9 25 118 41 5Stefan Moller Alternative for Germany 12 077 14 4Karola Stange The Left 9 312 11 1Sebastian Perdelwitz Better City Erfurt 7 963 9 5Alexander Thumfart Alliance 90 The Greens 5 323 6 4Daniel Stassny Free Voters Pirate Party 3 519 4 2Marko Enke Free Democratic Party 1 709 2 0Valid votes 83 701 99 3 60 550 98 0Invalid votes 562 0 7 1 240 2 0Total 84 263 100 0 61 790 100 0Electorate voter turnout 172 908 48 7 172 562 35 8Source Wahlen in Thuringen Results of the 2019 city council election The most recent city council election was held on 26 May 2019 and the results were as follows Party Lead candidate Votes Seats Christian Democratic Union CDU Michael Panse 56 789 19 6 5 1 10 2Social Democratic Party SPD Andreas Bausewein 49 627 17 1 11 6 9 6The Left Die Linke Matthias Barwolff 47 742 16 5 5 5 8 3Alternative for Germany AfD Stefan Moller 43 069 14 9 10 4 7 5Alliance 90 The Greens Grune Astrid Rothe Beinlich 34 318 11 8 2 1 6 1Better City Erfurt M Tina Morgenroth 21 303 7 3 New 4 NewFree Democratic Party FDP Thomas Kemmerich 15 513 5 4 2 9 3 2Free Voters FW Daniel Stassny 14 454 5 0 1 6 2 0Pirate Party Germany Piraten Peter Stadter 5 472 1 9 0 2 1 0The III Path Enrico Biczysko 1 635 0 6 New 0 NewValid votes 97 492 96 8Invalid votes 3 232 3 2Total 100 724 100 0 50 0Electorate voter turnout 172 389 58 4 11 1Source Wahlen in ThuringenTwin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany Erfurt is twinned with 75 Gyor Hungary 1971 Vilnius Lithuania 1972 Kalisz Poland 1982 Mainz Germany 1988 Lille France 1991 Shawnee United States 1993 San Miguel de Tucuman Argentina 1993 Lovech Bulgaria 1996 Haifa Israel 2000 Xuzhou China 2005 Kati Mali 2011 Notable people EditSee List of people from ErfurtFootnotes Edit As with the case of an anthropomorhic figurine excavated in Erfurt some researchers including Olaf Hockmann 9 indicated those were intentionally broken since neolithic figurines in human figure were found in fragment in high ratio among excavations in central Europe 10 11 12 Between 1631 and 1648 during the Thirty Years War Erfurt was occupied by Swedish forces 20 thus the effigy of Queen Christina appears on the 1645 Erfurt 10 Ducat Portugaloser There are seven gold coins known to exist bearing the effigy of Queen Christina a unique 1649 five ducat 21 and six 1645 10 ducat specimen 22 References Edit Gewahlte Burgermeister aktuelle Landesubersicht Freistaat Thuringen accessed 13 July 2021 Bevolkerung der Gemeinden erfullenden Gemeinden und Verwaltungsgemeinschaften in Thuringen Gebietsstand 31 12 2021 in German Thuringer Landesamt fur Statistik June 2022 Mangold Max 2005 Erfurt Das Ausspracheworterbuch Mannheim Leipzig Wien Zurich Duden Verlag p 311 ISBN 978 3 411 04066 7 Retrieved 22 June 2011 Erfurt Tourismus 2003 Erfurt Erlebnis Kramerbrucke parallel title Merchants Bridge Erfurt Erfurt Stadtverwaltung Zitadelle Petersberg Im neuen Glanz erleben Erfurt Tourismus amp Marketing GmbH in German Retrieved 31 October 2016 Westholm Gun 1994 Hanseatic Sites Routes and Monuments A Traveler s Guide to the Past and Present Uppsala Gotland Centre for Baltic Studies University of Erfurt History Timeline Archived from the original on 27 June 2018 Retrieved 31 January 2016 Metaxas Eric 2017 Martin Luther The Man Who Rediscovered God and Changed the World New York Viking Press Hockmann Olaf 1965 Menschliche Darstellungen in der bandkeramischen Kultur Human representations in the band ceramic culture Jb RGZM in German 12 1 34 Banffy Eszter Gestures from artefacts within domestic rituals in the Neolithic different attitudes to certain types of cult objects PDF semioticon com p 2 Retrieved 28 September 2017 Banffy Eszter 13 April 2017 Insoll Timothy ed Neolithic Eastern and Central Europe The Oxford Handbook of Prehistoric Figurines Oxford University Press p 711 ISBN 9780191663109 Retrieved 28 September 2017 Table of contents is available for The Oxford Handbook of Prehistoric Figurines 2017 online Table of Contents PDF Archived from the original PDF on 28 September 2017 Retrieved 28 September 2017 Heinemeyer Karl 2004 Bonifatius in Mitteldeutschland In Hardy Eidam Marina Moritz Gerd Rainer Riedel Kai Uwe Schierz eds Bonifatius Heidenopfer Christuskreuz Eichenkult in German Stadtverwaltung Erfurt pp 73 87 Schmidt Christoph G 2004 Im Machtbereich der Merowinger Politische und gesellschaftliche Strukturen in Thuringen vom 6 bis 8 Jahrhundert In Hardy Eidam Marina Moritz Gerd Rainer Riedel Kai Uwe Schierz eds Bonifatius Heidenopfer Christuskreuz Eichenkult in German Stadtverwaltung Erfurt pp 39 56 Chronicle of Erfurt Web Archive Archived from the original on 4 October 2010 Curio 1 The Erfurter Latrinensturz The Fortweekly Retrieved 4 September 2019 a b Archeologists Discover Medieval Jewish Bath in Erfurt 12 04 2007 Deutsche Welle 1 Sturzebecher Maria June July 2014 Zwei Schatze Zeugnisse judischer Kultur in Erfurt Archaologie in Deutschland in German Darmstadt WGB 3 2014 32 35 ISSN 0176 8522 a b History and Buildings Cuhaj George S ed 2009a Standard Catalog of World Gold Coins 1601 present 6 ed Krause pp 490 491 ISBN 978 1 4402 0424 1 Friedberg Arthur Friedberg Ira 2009 Gold Coins of the World From Ancient Times to the Present 8 ed The Coin amp Currency Institute pp 688 89 ISBN 978 0 87184 308 1 Kunker Rarities Auction retrieved 1 March 2015 Metaxas Eric 2017 Martin Luther The Man Who Rediscovered God and Changed the World New York Viking Press Hauptschluss der ausserordentlichen Reichsdeputation in German documentArchiv de 25 February 1803 Retrieved 17 January 2016 The full text of Hauptschluss der ausserordentlichen Reichsdeputation vom 25 Februar 1803 at German Wikisource Francis Loraine Petre 1993 First published 1907 Napoleon s Conquest of Prussia 1806 Lionel Leventhal pp 194 95 ISBN 1 85367 145 2 Digby Smith 1998 The Napoleonic Wars Data Book Greenhill p 226 ISBN 1 85367 276 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n 1806 1814 Erfurt unter franzosischer Besetzung 1806 1814 Erfurt under French occupation in German Erfurt Stadtverwaltung Erfurt city administration 22 January 2013 Retrieved 2 January 2016 a b c Kurzer historischer Uberblick Brief historical overview Napoleon s Furstenkongress Erfurt in German Euratibor Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 2 January 2016 Gerhard Robert Walter von Coeckelberghe Dutzele 1834 Ruinen oder Taschenbuch zur Geschichte verfallener Ritterburgen und Schlosser etc Ruins or A pocketbook on the history of dilapidated knights castles in German Mich Lechner p 21 Retrieved 23 January 2016 Nach der unglucklichen Schlacht bei Jena und dem Ruckzuge der Preussen wurde sie durch Kapitulation den Franzosen ubergeben und erhielt anfangs eine ziemlich starke Besatzung doch wurde sie in der Folge so von ihnen vernachlassigt dass in einer gewissen Epoche der Marketender Sturm mit seiner Familie und ein alter Unteroffizier ihre ganze Garnison ausmachten Damals war es wo der Intendant Devismes und der Domainen Direktor Gentil in der nach der Stadt zugekehrten Seite der Mauer einen Schatz suchen liess der noch aus den Zeiten des ehemaligen Benedektiner Nonnenklosters hier versteckt seyn sollte ohne zu bedenken dass zufolge der oben angefuhrten an der Mauer befindlichen Inschrift kein Schatz von 1478 her in einer Mauer versteckt seyn konnte die uber 100 Jahre darnach erst erbaut worden war aber die Habsucht eilte hier jeder nahern Untersuchung vor Bei dieser Gelegenheit wurde auch die alte Burgkapelle demoliert und aus den verkauften Baumaterialien die Arbeiter bezahlt die beim Schatzgraben hilfreiche Hand geleistet hatten After the unfortunate battle of Jena and the retreat of the Prussians it was handed over by capitulation to the French and was initially fairly strongly garrisoned but was subsequently so neglected that at one time the whole garrison consisted of the sutler Sturm with his family and an old sergeant At that time Intendant de Vismes fr and Domain Director Gentil searched in the city side walls for treasure hidden since the times of the former Benedictine nunnery without considering that an inscription located on the wall above showed that it had been built just over 100 years later so no treasure could have been hidden there in 1478 but greed hastened this before any closer investigation On that occasion the old chapel was demolished and the workers who had helped dig for treasure were paid from the sale of the building materials a b c d e Denkmale Erfurts 1806 1814 Monuments of Erfurt 1806 1814 in German Thuringer Naturbrief Retrieved 3 January 2016 Frank Palmowski 2015 First published 2013 Die Belagerung von Erfurt 1813 1814 The Siege of Erfurt 1813 1814 in German Sutton Verlag p 82 ISBN 978 3 954 00604 5 Willibald Gutsche ed 1989 Geschichte der Stadt Erfurt History of the city of Erfurt in German 2nd revised ed Weimar ISBN 3 7400 0095 3 a b Christoph Wilhelm von Koch 1838 Histoire abregee des traites de paix entre les puissances de l Europe depuis la paix de Westphalie Volume 3 Abridged history of the peace treaties between the powers of Europe since the Peace of Westphalia Volume 3 in French Meline Cans et Compagnie Le general Kleist assiegeait Erfurt Par suite d une capitulation signee le 20 decembre le generale francais d Alton se retira dans les deux forts de Petersberg et Cyriacsbourg et la ville fut remise aux Prussiens le 6 janvier 1814 General Kleist laid siege to Erfurt As a result of a capitulation signed on 20 December the French general d Alton withdrew to the two forts of Petersberg and Cyriaksburg and the town was handed over to the Prussians on 6 January 1814 a b c d e 1814 1850 Erfurt im preussischen Staat 1814 1850 Erfurt in the Prussian state in German Erfurt Stadtverwaltung Erfurt city administration 22 January 2013 Retrieved 3 January 2016 a b Georg Friedrich Huhn 1839 Kurzgefasste Nachricht von der Belagerung Blokade und Einzug der Koniglich Preussischen Truppen in Erfurt Vom 21sten Oktober 1813 bis zum 8ten Januar 1814 In einem Briefe als ein Journal abgefasst und an einen vertrauten Freund abgesendet Bei Gelegenheit der 25jahrigen Jubelfeier neu abgedruckt Concise news of the siege blockade and entry of the Royal Prussian troops into Erfurt From 21 October 1813 to 8 January 1814 In a letter as a journal written and sent to a trusted friend Reprinted on the occasion of the 25th jubilee Erfurt Frank Palmowski 2015 First published 2013 Die Belagerung von Erfurt 1813 1814 The Siege of Erfurt 1813 1814 in German Sutton Verlag p 25 ISBN 978 3 954 00604 5 Retrieved 17 January 2016 Preussische Truppen marschieren in der Stadt ein Auf dem Anger kommt es zu Jubelszenen Der Napoleon Obelisk wird zerstort Prussian troops march into the city On the Anger this leads to scenes of jubilation The Napoleon obelisk is destroyed Schule Annegret 2017 J A Topf amp Sohne ein Erfurter Familieunternehmen und der Holocaust Erfurt Landeszentrale fur politische Bildung Thuringen Stanton Shelby World War II Order of Battle An Encyclopedic Reference to U S Army Ground Forces from Battalion through Division 1939 1946 Stackpole Books Revised Edition 2006 p 150 Kottek M J Grieser C Beck B Rudolf F Rubel 2006 World Map of the Koppen Geiger climate classification updated PDF Meteorol Z 15 3 259 263 Bibcode 2006MetZe 15 259K doi 10 1127 0941 2948 2006 0130 Retrieved 22 January 2013 Peel M C Finlayson B L McMahon T A 2007 Updated world map of the Koppen Geiger climate classification Hydrol Earth Syst Sci 11 5 1633 1644 Bibcode 2007HESS 11 1633P doi 10 5194 hess 11 1633 2007 ISSN 1027 5606 direct Final Revised Paper Erfurt Population 2013 Page 21 23 PDF According to Thuringer Landesamt fur Statistik Predigerkloster Die Predigerkirche und das Predigerkloster als Heimat von Meister Eckhart meister eckhart erfurt de Evangelische Predigergemeinde Erfurt Retrieved 27 May 2022 Augustinerkloster Archived from the original on 5 February 2016 Retrieved 31 January 2016 Lehmann Hartmut 1995 Weber s Protestant Ethic Cambridge University Press p 118 Korn Ingolf 2012 Margaretha Reichardt Haus Bauhaus Reisebuch Dumont Buchverlag p 74 ISBN 978 3 8321 9411 6 a b Jewish Life in Erfurt Old synagogue Jewish Life in Erfurt Old synagogue Retrieved 31 October 2016 The Local 4 December 2014 How ordinary people smashed the Stasi Retrieved 15 January 2018 Visit Thuringia Margaretha Reichard Haus Retrieved 15 January 2018 Erfurt Tourismus German Horticulture Museum Archived 4 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 15 January 2018 German staging of Verdi s A Masked Ball on 9 11 with naked cast in Mickey Mouse masks The Daily Telegraph London 11 April 2008 Archived from the original on 13 April 2008 Retrieved 2 May 2010 europeantraveler net St Mary s Cathedral and St Severi s Church Erfurt outdooractive com Retrieved 28 May 2022 Erfurt Tourismus Famous Individuals Lucas Cranach Archived 13 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 18 January 2018 Kloster St Ursula Geschichte Retrieved 15 January 2018 UNESCO World Heritage Augustinian Monastery Erfurt extension application welterbe luther de Archived from the original on 4 August 2017 Retrieved 29 May 2017 a b Martin Luther s Stationen in Erfurt erfurt tourismus de in German Retrieved 28 May 2022 Bedeutung Meister Eckhart in Erfurt in German Evangelische Predigergemeinde Erfurt Archived from the original on 25 February 2014 geo viaregia org Hospitalkirche Retrieved 15 January 2018 Jewish life in Erfurt Mikveh Retrieved 4 June 2017 Old synagogue and Mikveh in Erfurt UNESCO world heritage centre Retrieved 31 October 2016 Jewish Life in Erfurt Small synagogue Retrieved 31 October 2016 Available at Jewish Life in Erfurt Great synagogue Retrieved 31 October 2016 Jewish Life in Erfurt New synagogue Retrieved 31 October 2016 a b Stadtverwaltung Erfurt 4 September 2012 Stadtbefestigung einst und jetzt Retrieved 28 December 2017 Verein der Freunde der Citadelle Petersberg zu Erfurt e V 2015 350 Jahre Zitadelle Petersberg Tagungsband Wissenschaftliches Kolloquim zum 350 Jahrestages der Grundsteinlegung der Zitadelle Petersberg vom 29 Mai bis 31 Mai 2015 Universitat Erfurt Die Cyriaksburg Sitz des Deutschen Gartenbaumuseums Erfurt Retrieved 23 December 2017 Deutsche Bahn Retrieved 1 November 2018 Ausbau der Erfurter Strassenbahn zur Stadtbahn Expansion of Erfurt tram to light rail in German Essener Verkehrs Aktiengesellschaft EVAG Retrieved 20 October 2013 Faculties Institutes amp Services Universitat Efurt International Students Retrieved 15 January 2018 Bauhaus 2019 The Bauhaus in Thuringia Archived 16 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 19 November 2016 Thuringer Allgemeine Kontakt Retrieved 13 January 2014 Partnerstadte erfurt de in German Erfurt Retrieved 25 November 2019 Bibliography EditSee also Bibliography of the history of ErfurtExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Erfurt Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Erfurt Erfurt City Panoramas Panoramic Views and virtual Tours Kraemerbruecke Sister City since 1993 with Shawnee Kansas World Shots Germany Erfurt Collection of photographs English Russian Hebrew Memorial and Museum Topf amp Sons Builders of the Auschwitz Oven Old maps of Erfurt Eran Laor Cartographic Collection The National Library of Israel in Historic Cities Research Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erfurt amp oldid 1143542406, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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